From: Chet Ramey Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2013 13:01:23 +0000 (-0400) Subject: bash-20130830 remove leftover and stray files X-Git-Tag: bash-4.4-alpha~129 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=c8cd7511e642607fd7d6e24fab12dfb8502590bb;p=thirdparty%2Fbash.git bash-20130830 remove leftover and stray files --- diff --git a/CWRU/CWRU.chlog~ b/CWRU/CWRU.chlog~ deleted file mode 100644 index 16aede8d0..000000000 --- a/CWRU/CWRU.chlog~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5234 +0,0 @@ - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - -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 - -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 - - - 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 - -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 - -support/shobj-conf - - add a stanza for nsk on the Tandem from Joachim Schmitz - - -{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 - - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - and Matthias Klose - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - 3/4 - --- -lib/readline/bind.c - - add a missing free of `names' in rl_function_dumper. Bug report - and fix from Michael Snyder - - 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 - - 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 , bug report originally - from Oleg Nesterov - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 3/26 - ---- -lib/readline/rltypedefs.h - - remove old Function/VFunction/CPFunction/CPPFunction typedefs as - suggested by Tom Tromey - -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 - - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - -lib/readline/display.c - - include 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 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 - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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." - - 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 - - - 5/2 - --- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - add forward reference to `Pattern Matching' from `Pathname - Expansion', suggested by Greg Wooledge - - 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 \ 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - -builtins/help.def - - help_builtin: change strncmp to strcmp so that `help read' no longer - matches `readonly'. Suggested by Clark Wang - -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 - -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 - - - 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 - - -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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - -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 - - -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 - - - 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 - -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 - - - 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 - -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 - -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 - -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 glob_asciirange is non-zero, we use straight - C-locale-like ordering. Suggested by Aharon Robbins - - - 6/30 - ---- -execute_cmd.c - - execute_pipeline: make sure the lastpipe code is protected by - #ifdef JOB_CONTROL. Fixes problem reported by Thomas Cort - - - 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 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 - - 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 - - _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 - - -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 - - 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 - - -builtins/printf.def - - getint: if garglist == 0, return whatever getintmax returns (0). - Fixes bug reported by Ralph Coredroy - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 . - 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 - -- 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 - -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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 9/19 - ---- -expr.c - - exppower: replace the simple exponentiation algorithm with an - implementation of exponentiation by squaring. Inspired by report - from Nicolas ARGYROU - -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 - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi},lib/readline/doc/{hsuser,rluser}.texi - - minor editorial changes inspired by suggestions from - Roger Zauner - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 and Patrick Pfeifer - - - 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 - -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 - -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 - - 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 - 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 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 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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - -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 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 - - -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 - - 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 - -builtins/read.def - - skip over NUL bytes in input, as most modern shells seem to. Bug - report by Matthew Story - -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 - - -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 - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - -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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - -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 - - 1/18 - ---- - -{configure,config.h}.in - - new check: check for AUDIT_USER_TTY defined in , - 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 - - 1/21 - ---- - -lib/readline/readline.c: - - _rl_dispatch_subseq: add an inter-character timeout for multi-char - key sequences. Suggested by . 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 - - - 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 - - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - - _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 - - - 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 - -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 - - -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 - - -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 - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - 2/21 - ---- -doc/{bash,builtins}.1 - - minor changes from Bjarni Ingi Gislason - -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 - - 2/22 - ---- -lib/sh/shquote.c - - sh_backslash_quote: quote tilde in places where it would be - expanded. From a report from John Kearney - - 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 - - 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 - - u32toutf16: function to convert unsigned 32-bit value (unicode) to - UTF-16. From John Kearney - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - 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 - - - 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 - -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 - - -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 - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - ; this prompted by report from Barry Downes - - -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 - - - 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 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 - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 , - fix from Andreas Schwab - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - 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 and - supplemented by Dan Douglas - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - changes to the description of substring expansion inspired by - suggestions from Bill Gradwohl - -doc/bashref.texi - - added substring expansion examples inspired by suggestions from - Bill Gradwohl - -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 . Fix from - John E. Malmberg - - 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 - - - 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 - - - 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" - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 - , fix from Andreas Schwab - - 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 - - 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 - - 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 , fix from - Andreas Schwab - - 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 - -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 - - 7/24 - ---- -configure.in - - interix: define RECYCLES_PIDS. Based on a report from Michael - Haubenwallner - - 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 - - -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 - -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 - - - 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 - -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 - - -{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 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 - - 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 - - -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 - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - - 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 - -doc/bashref.texi - - some small formatting changes from Karl Berry - - 8/27 - ---- -lib/readline/doc/{history,rlman,rluserman}.texi - - some small formatting changes from Karl Berry - -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 - and Chris F. A. Johnson - -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 - -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} - -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 and most recently by Jordan Michael - Ziegler - -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 - - - 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 - - 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 - -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 - -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 - - 9/11 - ---- - -parse.y - - parse_comsub: make sure the `reserved word ok in this context' flag - is preserved after we read `do' followed by whitespace. Fixes bug - reported by Benoit Vaugon - - 9/13 - ---- -configure.ac,config.h.in - - enable-direxpand-default: new configure option, turns the `direxpand' - shell option on by default - -bashline.c - - dircomplete_expand, dircomplete_expand_relpath: initialize to 1 if - DIRCOMPLETE_EXPAND_DEFAULT is defined and non-zero - -doc/bashref.texi - - enable-direxpand-default: document new configure option - - 9/14 - ---- -shell.c - - --protected: make option valid only when wordexp is compiled into - the shell. Fix from Roman Rakus - -configure.ac - - HP NonStop (*-nsk*): compile --without-bash-malloc. Change from - Joachim Schmitz - - 9/16 - ---- -subst.c,execute_cmd.c,lib/glob/sm_loop.c,lib/sh/shquote.c - - minor code cleanups from Joachim Schmitz - -lib/readline/colors.h - - workaround for HP NonStop compiler issue with from - Joachim Schmitz - - 9/17 - ---- -builtins/printf.def - - printf_builtin: handle localtime returning NULL, as can happen when - encountering overflow. Bug report and initial fix from - Eduardo A. Bustamante López - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - emphasize that brace expansion using character ranges ({a..c}) acts - as if the C locale were in use. Prompted by message from - Marcel Giannelia - - 9/20 - ---- -lib/sh/wcsnwidth.c - - wcsnwidth: new function, variant of wcwidth, returns the number of - wide characters from a string that will be displayed to not exceed - a specified max column position - - 9/21 - ---- -builtins/help.def - - show_builtin_command_help: break code that displays the short-doc - for each builtin in two columns into a new function: dispcolumn - - wdispcolumn: multibyte-char version of dispcolumn; uses wide - chars and printf "%ls" format. Fixes problem reported by - Nguyá»n Thái Ngá»c Duy - - 9/22 - ---- -execute_cmd.c - - execute_disk_command: before running the command-not-found hook, - call kill_current_pipeline() to make sure we don't add processes - to an existing pipeline or wait for processes erroneously - - 9/23 - ---- -lib/readline/input.c - - rl_input_available_hook: new hook function, called from - _rl_input_available (or _rl_input_queued) to return whether or not - input is available wherever the input source is - -lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi - - rl_input_available_hook: document - - 9/27 - ---- -lib/glob/sm_loop.c: - - GMATCH: after one or more `*', an instance of ?(x) can match zero or - 1 times (unlike ?, which has to match one character). The old code - failed if it didn't match at least once. Fixes `a*?(x)' bug. - - GMATCH: if we hit the end of the search string, but not the end of - the pattern, and the rest of the pattern is something that can - match the NUL at the end of the search string, we should successfully - match. Fixes `a*!(x)' bug reported by - - 10/2 - ---- -command.h - - add c_lock member to coproc structure for future use to tell who is - manipulating it - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_coproc: block SIGCHLD while parent is forking coproc - process and adding pid to sh_coproc struct to avoid race condition - where child is reaped before the pid is assigned and the coproc is - never marked as having died. Fixes race condition identified by - Davide Baldini - - add assignments to c_lock member of struct coproc in various - functions that manipulate it; was used to identify race condition - - coproc_pidchk: don't call coproc_dispose to avoid using malloc and - other functions in a signal handler context - - coproc_dispose: call BLOCK_SIGNAL/UNBLOCK_SIGNAL for SIGCHLD while - manipulating the sh_coproc struct - - 10/6 - ---- -lib/readline/complete.c - - rl_display_match_list: if printing completions horizontally, don't - bother with spacing calculations if limit == 1, which means we are - printing one completion per line no matter what. Fixes bug - reported by David Kaasen - - 10/7 - ---- -builtins/declare.def - - declare_internal: add error checking for nameref attribute and - variable assignments: self-references, attempts to make an array - variable a nameref - -subst.c - - parameter_brace_expand: handle parameter_brace_expand_word returning - &expand_param_fatal or &expand_param_error and return the appropriate - error value - - parameter_brace_expand_word: if a nameref variable's value is not a - valid identifier, return an error - - param_expand: if a nameref variable's value is not a valid identifier, - return an error - -test.c - - unary_operator: add new -R variable, returns true if variable is set - and has the nameref attribute. From ksh93 - -builtins/test.def - - add -R to description of conditional commands for help test - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - document new -R unary conditional operator - - 10/13 - ----- -trap.c - - check_signals_and_traps: new function, convenience function for the - rest of the shell to check for pending terminating and interrupt - signals, and to check for and process any pending traps - - any_signals_trapped: new function, returns non-zero if any signals - are trapped and -1 if not - -trap.h - - extern declaration for check_signals_and_traps - -bashline.c - - bashline_reset: make sure we reset the event hook - - bash_event_hook: call check_signals_and_traps instead of just - checking for terminating signals so we can run pending traps and - react to interrupts, and reset the event hook when we're done - - - 10/14 - ----- -trap.c - - trap_handler: if executing in a readline signal handler context, - call bashline_set_event_hook to install bash_event_hook to process - the signal (if bash cares about it) - -sig.c - - sigint_sighandler: call bashline_set_event_hook to set the event - hook if we're executing in a readline signal handler context - -lib/readline/input.c - - rl_getc: call RL_CHECK_SIGNALS if read returns -1/EINTR and the caught - signal is SIGINT or SIGQUIT rather than waiting until the next time - around the loop - - rl_getc: call rl_event_hook after calling RL_CHECK_SIGNALS to allow - an application signal handler to set the event hook in its own - signal handler (e.g., like bash trap_handler or sigint_sighandler) - - -parse.y - - yy_readline_get: don't set interrupt_immediately before we call - readline(). Inspired by report from lanshun zhou - - -input.c - - getc_with_restart: add call to run_pending_traps after call to - CHECK_TERMSIG - -lib/sh/zread.c - - zread: call check_signals_and_traps if read() returns -1/EINTR - instead of just ignoring the EINTR and deferring handling any - signal that generated it - -builtins/mapfile.def - - mapfile: don't set interrupt_immediately before calling zgetline() - (which uses zread internally) - -builtins/read.def - - read_builtin: don't set interrupt_immediately before calling zread - (moved code around so that it was only being set right around calls - to zread to avoid signal handler conflicts). Inspired by report - from lanshun zhou - - edit_line: don't set interrupt_immediately around call to readline() - - include shmbutil.h - - read_builtin: don't call read_mbchar unless is_basic(c) returns - false for the character we just read - - 10/15 - ----- -sig.c - - throw_to_top_level: if interrupt_state is non-zero, make sure that - last_command_exit_value reflects 128+SIGINT if it's not already - greater than 128 - - 10/20 - ----- -builtins/wait.def - - WAIT_RETURN: set wait_signal_received back to 0 for the potential - next call to wait - -quit.h - - CHECK_WAIT_INTR: macro to check whether trap_handler handled a - signal and set wait_signal_received; longjmp to wait_intr_buf in - that case - -jobs.c - - wait_for, waitchld: call CHECK_WAIT_INTR at the same places we call - CHECK_TERMSIG to check for terminating signals - - wait_sigint_handler: don't longjmp out of the wait builtin unless - interrupt_immediately is set; otherwise just SIGRETURN from the - handler - - wait_sigint_handler: if interrupt_immediately not set, but we are - executing in the wait builtin and SIGINT is not trapped, treat it - as a `normally received' SIGINT: restore the signal handler and - send SIGINT to ourselves - - waitchld: when in posix mode and running SIGCHLD traps, don't longjmp - to wait_intr_buf (and let wait be interrupted) if we're running from - a signal handler. Wait for CHECK_WAIT_INTR to do the longjmp. - run_pending_traps will run the SIGCHLD trap later - -nojobs.c - - reap_zombie_children, wait_for_single_pid, wait_for: call - CHECK_WAIT_INTR where we call CHECK_TERMSIG - - wait_sigint_handler: don't longjmp out of the wait builtin unless - interrupt_immediately is set; otherwise just SIGRETURN from the - handler - -trap.c - - trap_handler: make sure wait_signal_received is set if the wait - builtin is executing, and only longjmp if interrupt_immediately is - set. This whole set of fixes was prompted by report from - lanshun zhou - - 10/24 - ----- -lib/glob/glob.c - - glob_filename: only check directory_name for globbing chars if - it's of non-zero length - -lib/sh/strchrnul.c - - new simpler implementation - -subst.c - - command_substitute: call set_shellopts after turning off errexit - in subshells so it's reflected in $SHELLOPTS - - 11/7 - ---- -builtins/evalstring.c - - parse_and_execute: treat ERREXIT case like reader_loop does: set - variable_context to 0 before longjmping back to top_level. Don't - run the unwind-protect context to avoid side effects from popping - function contexts. Part of fix for problem reported by Nikolai - Kondrashov - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_simple_command: call unlink_fifo_list only if this is the - last element of a pipeline (or not in a pipeline), rather than for - every child. Fixes difference in behavior between /dev/fd and - FIFOs reported by Zev Weiss - - execute_null_command: do the same thing in the parent branch after - make_child - - 11/14 - ----- -subst.c - - parameter_brace_expand: a variable is null if it's special ($@, $*), - the expansion occurs within double quotes, and the expansion turns - into a quoted null. Fixes debian bug 692447 reported by - Matrosov Dmitriy - -jobs.c - - run_sigchld_trap: make sure `running_trap' sentinel is set - appropriately - - waitchld: only run the sigchld trap if we're not in a signal - handler, not running a trap, and executing the wait builtin. - Otherwise, queue for later handling. We still run one instance - of the trap handler per exited child. Bulk of fix for bug - reported by Elliott Forney - -trap.c - - queue_sigchld_trap: set catch_flag so run_pending_traps notices, - and set trapped_signal_received for completeness. Rest of fix - for bug reported by Elliott Forney - -lib/malloc/malloc.c - - block_signals: renamed to _malloc_block_signals, made public - - unblock_signals: renamed to _malloc_unblock_signals, made public - -lib/malloc/imalloc.h - - extern declarations for _malloc_{un,}block_signals - -lib/malloc/table.c - - mregister_alloc, mregister_free: block signals around table - manipulation - - 11/15 - ----- -trap.c - - run_pending_traps: set SIG_INPROGRESS flag around calls to - run_sigchld_handler so other parts of the shell know that the - SIGCHLD trap handler is executing - - run_pending_traps: if we get a situation where we are looking at - running a SIGCHLD trap but the trap string is IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER - and the SIG_INPROGRESS flag is set, just skip it. This is possible - if run_pending_traps is called from a SIGCHLD trap handler run by - run_sigchld_trap - -doc/bash.1,lib/readline/doc/{rluser.texi,readline.3} - - corrected description of the effect of `set history-size 0'. Report - from Vesa-Matti J Kari - -include/stdc.h - - CPP_STRING: new define, replaces __STRING - -lib/malloc/{malloc.c,imalloc.h} - - replace __STRING with CPP_STRING - - 11/16 - ----- -lib/readline/bind.c - - sv_histsize: if argument evaluates to a value < 0, unstifle the - history - - 11/22 - ----- -redir.c - - do_redirection_internal: if we have REDIR_VARASSIGN set in the - redirection flags and we set up `redirector' using fcntl or dup2, - don't add a redirect to make sure it stays open. Let the - script programmer manage the file handle. Fixes bug reported by - Sam Liddicott - - 11/24 - ----- -jobs.c - - wait_for_any_job: new function, waits for an unspecified background - job to exit and returns its exit status. Returns -1 on no background - jobs or no children or other errors. Calls wait_for with new - sentinel value ANY_PID - - wait_for: changes to handle argument of ANY_PID: don't look up or - try to modify the child struct, only go through the wait loop once. - Return -1 if waitpid returns no children - -jobs.h - - ANY_PID: new define - -builtins/wait.def - - new option: -n. Means to wait for the next job and return its exit - status. Returns 127 if there are no background jobs (or no - children). Feature most recently requested by Elliott Forney - - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - document new `wait -n' option - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_command_internal: save make_command_string () result in a - temp variable before calling savestring() on it; avoids evaluating - make_command_string() result twice. Fix from John E. Malmberg - - - 11/28 - ----- - -builtins/declare.def - - declare_internal: if an array variable is declared using `declare -a' - or `declare -A', but not assigned a value, set the `invisible' - attribute so the variable does not show up as set. Fix for bug - about variable initialization reported by Tim Friske - -builtins/{mapfile,read}.def - - after calling find_or_make_array_variable, make sure the invisible - flag is turned off, in case the variable was declared previously - using `declare -a' or `declare -A'. Side effect of above change to - declare_internal - -subst.c - - shell_expand_word_list: handle the W_ASSNGLOBAL flag and put -g into - the list of options passed to make_internal_declare as appropriate. - Fix for bug reported by Tim Friske - - 11/30 - ----- -test.c - - unary_op: make sure -v and -n check that the variable is not marked - as invisible before calling var_isset. Fix for bug reported by Tim - Friske - - 12/2 - ---- -subst.c - - process_substitute: turn off the `expanding_redir' flag, which - controls whether or not variables.c:find_variable_internal uses the - temporary environment to find variables. We want to use the - temp environment, since we don't have to worry about order of - evaluation in a subshell. Fixes bug reported by Andrey Borzenkov - - - 12/4 - ---- -lib/glob/glob.c - - glob_filename: changes to avoid null filenames and multiple entries - returned for patterns like **/** (globstar enabled). Fixes bug - reported by Ulf Magnusson - - 12/10 - ----- -lib/glob/glob.c - - glob_filename: finish up a series of changes to make globstar-style - globbing more efficient, avoid more duplicate filenames, and be more - compatible with other shells that implement it - o collapse a sequence of **/**/** to one ** - o note when the directory name is all ** or ends in ** so we - can treat it specially when the filename is ** - All inspired by report from Andrey Borzenkov - -lib/sh/zread.c - - zreadn: new function, like zread, but takes an additional argument - saying how many bytes to read into the local buffer. Can be used to - implement `read -N' without so many one-byte calls to zreadc. Code - from Mike Frysinger - - 12/12 - ----- -lib/glob/sm_loop.c - - PATSCAN (glob_patscan): if passed string already points to end of - pattern, return NULL immediately. Fixes problem with - extglob_skipname reported by Raphaël Droz - - 12/13 - ----- -execute_cmd.c - - execute_coproc: handle the command's exit status being inverted - (an oversight). Fixes bug reported by DJ Mills - and Andreas Schwab - - 12/14 - ----- -lib/readline/readline.c - - bind_arrow_keys_internal: add MINGW key bindings for Home, End, - Delete, and Insert keys. Fix from Pierre Muller - - -builtins/printf.def - - printf_builtin: '%()T' conversion: if there is no argument supplied, - behave as if -1 had been supplied (current time). ksh93-like feature - suggested by Clark Wang - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - document new printf %()T default argument behavior - - 12/15 - ----- -lib/readline/display.c - - displaying_prompt_first_line: new variable, indicates whether or - not the first line of output is displaying the prompt. Always true - in normal mode, sometimes false in horizontal scrolling mode - - rl_redisplay: set displaying_prompt_first_line to true unless we - are in horizontal mode; set to false in horizontal mode if the left - margin of the displayed line is greater than the end of the prompt - string - - rl_redisplay: when in horizontal scroll mode, don't adjust - _rl_last_c_pos by the wrap offset unless the line is displaying - a prompt containing invisible chars - - update line: don't adjust _rl_last_c_pos by the wrap offset unless - the line is displaying a prompt containing invisible chars - - update_line: if shrinking the line by reducing the number of - displayed characters, but we have already moved the cursor to the - beginning of the line where the first difference starts, don't - try to delete characters - -builtins/read.def - - unbuffered_read: set to 2 if invoked as `read -N' - - if unbuffered_read is set to 2, compute the number of chars we - need to read and read that many with zreadn. Posix mode still - uses zreadintr. Code from Mike Frysinger - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - read: make it clear that if read times out, it saves any input - read to that point into the variable arguments. Report from - Fiedler Roman - -subst.c - - command_substitute: change direct assignment of exit_immediately_on_error - to use change_flag ('e', FLAG_OFF) instead - -flags.c - - use errexit_flag as the variable modified by changes to the -e - option, reflect those changes to exit_immediately_on_error - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_builtin: new global variable, builtin_ignoring_errexit, set - to 0 by default and set to 1 if eval/source/command executing in a - context where -e should be ignored - - execute_builtin: set exit_immediately_on_error to errextit_flag - after executing eval/source/command in a context where -e should - be ignored - -flags.c - - if builtin_ignoring_errexit is set, changes to errexit_flag are - not reflected in the setting of exit_immediately_on_error. Fixes - bug reported by Robert Schiele - - 12/23 - ----- -include/posixjmp.h - - setjmp_nosigs: new define, call setjmp in such a way that it will - not manipulate the signal mask - -{expr,test,trap}.c - - setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp; don't need to manipulate - signal mask - -builtins/read.def - - read_builtin: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp; don't need - to manipulate signal mask - -builtins/evalstring.c: - - parse_and_execute: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp; don't need - to manipulate signal mask - - parse_string: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp; don't need - to manipulate signal mask - - parse_and_execute: save and restore the signal mask if we get a - longjmp that doesn't cause us to return or exit (case DISCARD) - - 12/24 - ----- -general.c - - bash_tilde_expand: only set interrupt_immediately if there are no - signals trapped; we want to jump to top level if interrupted but - not run any trap commands - - 12/25 - ----- -jobs.c - - run_sigchld_trap: no longer set interrupt_immediately before calling - parse_and_execute, even if this is no longer run in a signal handler - context - -input.c - - getc_with_restart: add call to QUIT instead of CHECK_TERMSIG - -parse.y - - yy_stream_get: now that getc_with_restart calls QUIT, don't need to - set interrupt_immediately (already had call to run_pending_traps) - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_subshell_builtin_or_function,execute_function,execute_in_subshell: - setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving return_catch; don't - need to manipulate signal mask - - execute_subshell_builtin_or_function,execute_in_subshell: - setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where appropriate when saving - top_level; don't need to manipulate signal mask if we're going to - exit right away - -subst.c - - command_substitute: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving - return_catch; don't need to manipulate signal mask - - command_substitute: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where - appropriate when saving top_level; don't need to manipulate signal - mask if we're going to exit right away - -trap.c - - run_exit_trap: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving - return_catch; don't need to manipulate signal mask - - run_exit_trap: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where - appropriate when saving top_level; don't need to manipulate signal - mask if we're going to exit right away - - _run_trap_internal: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving - return_catch; don't need to manipulate signal mask - -builtins/evalfile.c - - _evalfile: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving - return_catch; don't need to manipulate signal mask - -builtins/evalstring.c - - evalstring: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp when saving - return_catch; don't need to manipulate signal mask - -shell.c - - main: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where appropriate when - saving top_level; don't need to manipulate signal mask if we're - going to exit right away - - run_one_command: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where - appropriate when saving top_level; don't need to manipulate signal - mask if we're going to exit right away - - run_wordexp: setjmp_nosigs: call instead of setjmp where - appropriate when saving top_level; don't need to manipulate signal - mask if we're going to exit right away - -eval.c - - reader_loop: save and restore the signal mask if we get a longjmp - that doesn't cause us to return or exit (case DISCARD) - - 12/26 - ----- -parse.y - - shell_input_line_{index,size,len}: now of type size_t; in some cases - the unsigned property makes a difference - - STRING_SAVER: saved_line_{size,index} now of type size_t - - shell_getc: don't allow shell_input_line to grow larger than SIZE_MAX; - lines longer than that are truncated until read sees a newline; - addresses theoretical buffer overflow described by Paul Eggert - - - set_line_mbstate: size_t changes like shell_getc - - shell_getc: if shell_input_line is larger than 32K, free it and - start over to avoid large memory allocations sticking around - -variables.c - - bind_global_variable: new function, binds value to a variable in - the global shell_variables table - -variables.h - - bind_global_variable: new extern declaration - -builtins/declare.def - - declare_internal: if -g given with name=value, but variable is not - found in the global variable table, make sure to call - bind_global_variable so the variable is created and modified at - global scope. Fixes a bug where declare -g x=y could modify `x' - at a previous function scope - -command.h - - W_ASSIGNARRAY: new word flag, compound indexed array assignment - -subst.h - - ASS_MKGLOBAL: new assignment flag, forcing global assignment even in - a function context, used by declare -g - -execute_cmd.c - - fix_assignment_words: set W_ASSIGNARRAY flag if -a option given to - declaration builtin - -subst.c - - do_assignment_internal: explicitly handle case where we are - executing in a function and we want to create a global array or - assoc variable - - shell_expand_word_list: call make_internal_declare if -a option - given to declaration builtin (W_ASSIGNARRAY); handle -g option with - it (W_ASSNGLOBAL). Fixes inconsistency noticed by Vicente Couce - Diaz , where declare -ag foo=(bar) could modify - array variable foo at previous function scope, not global scope - - 12/27 - ----- -bashline.c - - Minix needs the third argument to tputs to be a void funtion taking - an int argument, not an int-returning function. Fix from - John E. Malmberg as part of VMS bash port - - 12/29 - ----- -configure.ac,version.c,patchlevel.h - - bash-4.3-devel: new version, new shell compatibility level (43) - -subst.c - - parameter_brace_patsub: put the bash-4.2 code back in from the - change of 3/3 that runs the replacement string through quote - removal, make it dependent on shell_compatibility_level <= 42 - -builtins/shopt.def - - compat42: new shopt option - - set_compatibility_level: change logic to set and unset various - compat variables and shell_compatibility_level - -COMPAT - - new documentation for bash-4.3 compatibility changes - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - compat42: document new shopt option - -builtins/shopt.def - - set_compatibility_opts: new function, sets the various shopt - compat variables based on the value of shell_compatibility_level - -builtins/common.h - - set_compatibility_opts: new extern declaration - -variables.c - - BASH_COMPAT: new special variable; sets the shell compatibility - level. Accepts values in decimal (4.2) or integer (42) form; - Unsetting variable, setting it to empty string, or setting it to - out-of-range value sets the shell's compatibility level to the - default for the current version. Valid values are 3.1/31 through - the current version - - sv_shcompat: new function implementing logic for BASH_COMPAT - -variables.h - - sv_shcompat: new extern declaration - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - BASH_COMPAT: description of new variable - -lib/readline/complete.c - - _rl_colored_stats: default back to 0 for 4.3 release branch - - 1/5/2013 - -------- -quit.h - - remove spurious call to itrace in CHECK_WAIT_INTR - -bashline.c - - bash_event_hook: if we're going to jump to top_level, make sure we - clean up after readline() by calling rl_cleanup_after_signal(). - Fixes bug reported against devel branch by Raphaël Droz - - - bash_event_hook: reset the event hook before checking for signals - or traps in case we longjmp - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - small additions to the set -e section to make it more clear that - contexts where -e is ignored extend to compound commands as well - as shell functions - -lib/readline/readline.h - - rl_signal_event_hook: new extern declaration - -lib/readline/input.c - - rl_signal_event_hook: new variable, hook function to call when a - function (currently just read(2)) is interrupted by a signal and - not restarted - - rl_getc: call rl_signal_event_hook instead of rl_event_hook - -lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi - - rl_signal_event_hook: document new function - -bashline.c - - changes to set rl_signal_event_hook instead of rl_event_hook - -lib/readline/readline.h - - change readline version numbers to 6.3 - - 1/6 - --- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - a couple of changes to the descriptions of the ERR trap and its - effects based on a message from Rob Nagler - - 1/9 - --- -expr.c - - expassign: invalidate curlval before freeing and NULLing tokstr to - avoid aliasing issues. Fixes bug reported by Eduardo A. Bustamante - López and Dan Douglas - -braces.c - - array_concat: don't be so aggressive in trying to short-circuit. We - can only short-circuit if we have a single-element array where the - element is an empty string (array[0] == "" array[1] = 0x0). Existing - practice requires us to replicate arrays and prefix or append empty - strings. Fixes bug reported by Eduardo A. Bustamante López - - - 1/11 - ---- -execute_cmd.c - - execute_builtin: since mapfile uses evalstring() to run its callbacks - internally, just like eval, so it needs to handle the case where the - temp environment given to mapfile persists throughout the entire - set of callback commands. This might be a problem with trap also, but - trap isn't run in the same way. Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas - - - 1/13 - ---- -redir.c - - redirection_error: before expanding the redirection word (if - expandable_redirection_filename returns true), disable command - substitution during expansion. Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas - - -subst.c - - expand_word_internal: case '\\': if the next character is an IFS - character, and the expansion occurs within double quotes, and the - character is not one for which backslash retains its meaning, add - the (escaped) '\' and the (escaped) character. Fixes bug reported - by Dan Douglas - - 1/15 - ---- -builtins/cd.def - - cd_builtin: make sure call to internal_getopt handles -e option. - Fixes bug reported by - - 1/17 - ---- -subst.c - - expand_word_list_internal: make sure tempenv_assign_error is - initialized to 0 - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_simple_command: make sure tempenv_assign_error is reset to 0 - after it's tested to see if an error should force the shell to exit. - Fixes problem where a the failure of a tempenv assignment preceding - a non-special builtin `sticks' and causes the next special builtin - to exit the shell. From a discussion on bug-bash started by - douxin - - 1/20 - ---- -subst.c - - parameter_brace_expand_rhs: call stupidly_hack_special_variables - after assigning with ${param[:]=word} even if IFS is changing. - Suggested by Dan Douglas [TENTATIVE, needs work - on IFS side effects] - -command.h - - W_GLOBEXP (which was unused) is now W_SPLITSPACE (which isn't used - yet) - -{execute_cmd,subst,variables}.c - - removed all code that mentioned W_GLOBEXP - - removed mention of gnu_argv_flags and code that set it - - 1/22 - ---- -subst.c - - param_expand: set W_SPLITSPACE if we expand (unquoted) $* and - IFS is unset or null so we can be sure to split this on spaces - no matter what happens with IFS later - - expand_word_internal: note that param_expand returns W_SPLITSPACE - in the returned word flags and keep track of that state with - `split_on_spaces' - - 1/23 - ---- -subst.c - - expand_word_internal: if split_on_spaces is non-zero, make sure - we split `istring' on spaces and return the resultant word. The - previous expansions should have quoted spaces in the positional - parameters where necessary. Suggested by Dan Douglas - - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_command_internal: make sure any subshell forked to run a - group command or user subshell at the end of a pipeline runs any - EXIT trap it sets. Fixes debian bash bug 698411 - http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=698411 - -subst.c - - shell_expand_word_list: fix code that creates args for and calls - make_internal_declare to avoid calling it twice (missing `else' - in 12/26 change) - - do_assignment_internal: fix code from 12/26 change to fix problem - where an existing assoc variable could be converted to an array - without checking `mkassoc' - - 1/24 - ---- -builtins/evalfile.c - - _evalfile: add missing `close (fd)' calls before returning to - avoid fd leaks. Bug and fix from Roman Rakus - - 1/25 - ---- -builtins/read.def - - read_builtin: don't try to play tricks with the top of the unwind- - protect stack after read gets a SIGALRM; save input_string to new - memory, run the stack, then restore input_string and assign the - variables. Part of fix for bug reported by konsolebox - ; the rest of the fix is with the changes in - trap and signal handling and doing away with interrupt_immediately - - 1/26 - ---- -redir.c - - redirection_expand, write_here_string, write_here_document: before - calling any of the word expansion functions, after setting - expanding_redir to 1 (which bypasses the temp environment in the - variable lookup functions), call sv_ifs to reset the cached IFS- - related variables set by subst.c:setifs(). This ensures that - redirections will not get any IFS values that are set in the - temporary environment, as Posix specifies. Then, after the word - expansions, after resetting expanding_redir to 0, call sv_ifs - again to make sure the cached IFS values are set from any - assignments in the temporary environment. We force executing_builtin - to 1 to `fool' the variable lookup functions into using any temp - environment, then reset it to its old value after sv_ifs returns. - This is what allows read() to use the (cached) IFS variables set - in the temp environment. Fixes inconsistency reported by Dan Douglas - - - 1/29 - ---- -lib/readline/display.c - - update_line: fix off-by-one error when updating vis_lbreaks array - in a multibyte locale that occurs when moving multibyte chars from - one line down to another. Bug report and fix from Egmont - Koblinger - - 1/30 - ---- -configure.ac - - changed version to 4.3-alpha - -redir.c - - redir_open: handle open returning -1/EINTR, which seems to happen - a lot with FIFOs and SIGCHLD, and call QUIT to handle other - signals that can interrupt open(2). Bug report and initial fix - from Mike Frysinger - - 1/31 - ---- -subst.c - - parameter_brace_expand: make sure to propagate the PF_ASSIGNRHS flag - to parameter_brace_expand_word - - parameter_brace_expand_word: make sure that if the PF_ASSIGNRHS flag - is set and we are expanding ${a[@]} or ${a[*]} we set quoted to - include Q_DOUBLE_QUOTES before calling array_value_internal, mirroring - what we do for $@ and $*. Fixes inconsistency reported by Dan - Douglas - -configure.ac - - use AC_CHECK_TOOL instead of AC_CHECK_PROG to check for ar, since it - will find $host-prefixed versions of utilities. Report and fix from - Mike Frysinger - -builtins/setattr.def - - set_var_attribute: check whether bind_variable (called when the - variable whose attributes are being modified is found in the temp - environment) just modified a read-only global variable, and don't - bother marking the temporary variable for propagation if so. The - propagation is superfluous and will result in a strange error - message - - 2/2 - --- -variables.c - - initialize_shell_variables: don't try to import function definitions - with invalid names from the environment if already in posix mode, - but create them as (invisible) exported variables so they pass - through the environment. Print an error message so user knows - what's wrong. Fixes bug reported by Tomas Trnka - - 2/9 - --- - -builtins/read.def - - sigalrm_seen, alrmbuf: now global so the rest of the shell (trap.c) - can use them - - sigalrm: just sets flag, no longer longjmps to alrmbuf; problem was - longjmp without manipulating signal mask, leaving SIGALRM blocked - -quit.h - - move CHECK_ALRM macro here from builtins/read.def so trap.c: - check_signals() can call it - -trap.c - - check_signals: add call to CHECK_ALRM before QUIT - - check_signals_and_traps: call check_signals() instead of including - CHECK_ALRM and QUIT inline. Integrating check for read builtin's - SIGALRM (where zread call to check_signals_and_traps can see it) - fixes problem reported by Mike Frysinger - - 2/12 - ---- -lib/glob/xmbsrtowcs.c - - xdupmbstowcs2: fixed but where end of string was not handled - correctly, causing loop to go past end of string in a bunch of cases. - Fixes bug reported by "Dashing" - - - 2/13 - ---- -builtins/pushd.def - - popd_builtin: treat any argument that isn't -n or of the form - [-+][[:digit:]]* as an error. Fixes problem reported by Bruce - Korb - - 2/14 - ---- -configure.ac - - add check for sig_atomic_t; already a placeholder for it in - config.h.in - - 2/15 - ---- -subst.c - - do_compound_assignment: don't call assign_compound_array_list with - a NULL variable in case make_local_xxx_variable returns NULL - (it will if you try to shadow a readonly or noassign variable). - Fixes bug reported by Richard Tollerton - - 2/16 - ---- -variables.c - - make_local_variable: print error messager if an attempt is made to - create a local variable shadowing a `noassign' variable. Previously - we just silently refused to do it - -trap.[ch] - - get_original_signal: now global so rest of the shell can use it - -sig.c - - initialize_shell_signals: install a signal handler for SIGTERM - that does nothing except set a sigterm_received flag instead of - ignoring it with SIG_IGN, as long as SIGTERM is not ignored when - the shell is started. Use get_original_signal early to get the - original handler, since we will do that later anyway - - set_signal_handler: if installing sigterm_sighandler as the SIGTERM - handler, make sure to add SA_RESTART flag to make it as close to - SIG_IGN as possible - -sig.h - - sigterm_sighandler: new extern declaration - -quit.h - - RESET_SIGTERM: set sigterm_receved to 0 - - CHECK_SIGTERM: check sigterm_received; if it's non-zero, treat it - as a fatal signal and call termsig_handler to exit the shell - -jobs.c - - make_child: call RESET_SIGTERM just before fork() so we can detect - if the child process received a SIGTERM before it's able to change - the signal handler back to what it was when the shell started - (presumably SIG_DFL). Only has effect if the shell installed - sigterm_sighandler for SIGTERM, interactive shells that were not - started with SIG_IGN as the SIGTERM handler - - make_child: call RESET_SIGTERM in the parent after fork() so the - rest of the shell won't react to it - -execute_cmd.c - - execute_simple_command: call CHECK_SIGTERM after make_child in child - to catch SIGTERM received after fork() and before restoring old - signal handlers - - execute_disk_command: call CHECK_SIGTERM after make_child in child - process after restoring old signal handlers and again just before - calling shell_execve. Fixes race condition observed by - Padraig Brady when testing with his `timeout' - program - -lib/readline/display.c - - open_some_spaces: new function, subset of insert_some_chars that just - opens up a specified number of spaces to be overwritten - - insert_some_spaces: now just calls to open_some_spaces followed by - _rl_output_some_chars - - update_line: use col_temp instead of recalculating it using - _rl_col_width in the case where we use more columns with fewer bytes - - update_line: use open_some_spaces and then output the right number - of chars instead of trying to print new characters then overwrite - existing characters in two separate calls. This includes removing - some dodgy code and making things simpler. Fix from Egmont - Koblinger - - use new variable `bytes_to_insert' instead of overloading temp in - some code blocks (nls - nfd, bytes that comprise the characters - different in the new line from the old) - - 2/18 - ---- -redir.c - - do_redirection_internal: add undoable redirection for the implicit - close performed by the <&n- and >&n- redirections. Fixes bug - reported by Stephane Chazelas - - 2/19 - ---- -sig.c - - termsig_handler: an interactive shell killed by SIGHUP and keeping - command history will try to save the shell history before exiting. - This is an attempt to preserve the save-history-when-the-terminal- - window-is-closed behavior - - 2/21 - ---- -braces.c - - brace_expand: if a sequence expansion fails (e.g. because the - integers overflow), treat that expansion as a simple string, including - the braces, and try to process any remainder of the string. The - remainder may include brace expansions. Derived from SuSE bug - 804551 example (https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=804551) - - 2/23 - ---- -{quit,sig}.h,sig.c - - sigterm_received declaration now in sig.h; type is sig_atomic_t - - sigwinch_received type now sig_atomic_t - - sig.h includes bashtypes.h and if SIG_DFL not defined - (same logic as trap.h) to pick up sig_atomic_t - -unwind_prot.c - - include sig.h before quit.h (reverse order) - - 2/27 - ---- -builtins/shopt.def - - reset_shopt_options: make sure check_window_size is reset to the - default from config.h, not unconditionally to 0 - -jobs.[ch] - - last_made_pid, last_asynchronous_pid: now volatile. Change from SuSE - -jobs.c - - wait_for: if we're using sigaction to install a handler for SIGCHLD, - make sure we specify SA_RESTART - -lib/{tilde,readline}/shell.c - - get_home_dir: instead of looking in the password file every time, - look once and cache the result - -sig.[ch] - - sigwinch_received, sigterm_received: now `volatile' qualified - -sig.c,quit.h - - interrupt_state,terminating_signal: now sig_atomic_t - - 3/1 - --- -MANIFEST,examples/* - - removed around 120 files without FSF copyrights; requested by - Karl Berry in early January - - 3/2 - --- -lib/malloc/malloc.c - - morecore: only check whether SIGCHLD is trapped if SIGCHLD is defined - -doc/bashref.texi - - Fixed most of the examples in the GNU Parallel section to use better - shell idioms following complaints on bug-bash; added a couple of - examples and smoothed out the text - -quit.h - - include "sig.h" for sig_atomic_t - -lib/readline/display.c - - update_line: when inserting one or more characters at the end of - the display line in a non-multibyte environment, just write from the - first difference to the end of the line and return. We don't have - to adjust _rl_last_c_pos. This is needed to adjust from the old - two-part copy to a single call to _rl_output_some_chars (change of - 2/16) - - 3/4 - --- -Makefile.in,doc/Makefile.in - - PACKAGE_TARNAME, docdir: new variables substituted by autoconf - - OTHER_DOCS,OTHER_INSTALLED_DOCS: new variables with auxiliary - documentation files to be installed into $(docdir) - - install: add new rule to install $(OTHER_DOCS) - - uninstall: add new rule to uninstall $(docdir)/$(OTHER_INSTALLED_DOCS) - -doc/bash.1 - - add URL to `POSIX' file in `SEE ALSO' section; put pointer to that - section in --posix and set -o posix descriptions - -examples/ - - removed around 110 examples at the request of the FSF due to copyright - issues - - 3/5 - --- -builtins/setattr.def - - readonly: modified help text slightly to make it clearer that - functions aren't changed or displayed unless the -f option is given. - Report from - - 3/9 - --- -include/typemax.h - - SIZE_MAX: define to 65535 (Posix minimum maximum) if not defined - -parse.y - - include "typemax.h" for possible SIZE_MAX definition, make sure we - include it after shell.h - -{braces,expr}.c - - include "typemax.h" for possible INTMAX_MIN and INTMAX_MAX definitions - - 3/10 - ---- -bashline.c - - bash_default_completion: make sure completion type of `!' (same as - TAB but with show-all-if-ambiguous set) and glob-word-completion - sets rl_filename_completion_desired to 0 so extra backslashes don't - get inserted by `quoting' the completion. We can't kill all the - matches because show-all-if-ambiguous needs them. Bug report from - Marcel (Felix) Giannelia - -[bash-4.3-alpha frozen] - - 3/14 - ---- -general.c - - trim_pathname: use memmove instead of memcpy since the source and - destination pathnames may overlap. Report and fix from Matthew - Riley - - 3/18 - ---- -configure.ac - - socklen_t is defined as `unsigned int' if configure can't find it - - 3/20 - ---- -lib/readline/complete.c - - S_ISVTX: since it's not defined on all platforms (Minix), make sure - its use is protected with #ifdef - - 3/21 - ---- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - Added mention of ${!name[@]} and ${!name[*]} expansions to get all - indices of an array. Suggested by Jonathan Leffler - - - 3/24 - ---- -subst.h - - SD_IGNOREQUOTE: new define for skip_to_delim; if set, means that - single quotes (for now) will be treated as ordinary characters - -subst.c - - skip_to_delim: handle SD_IGNOREQUOTE. no callers use it for now - - 3/25 - ---- -support/config.{guess,sub} - - updated to versions from autoconf-2.69 - - 3/31 - ---- -lib/sh/shquote.c - - sh_single_quote: short-circuit quoting a single "'" instead of - creating a long string with empty single-quoted strings - -parser.h - - DOLBRACE_QUOTE2: new define, like DOLBRACE_QUOTE, but need to single- - quote results of $'...' expansion because quote removal will be - done later. Right now this is only done for ${word/pat/rep} - -parse.y - - parse_matched_pair: set state to DOLBRACE_QUOTE2 for pattern - substitution word expansion so we don't treat single quote specially - in the pattern or replacement string - - parse_matched_pair: if we're parsing a dollar-brace word expansion - (${...}) and we're not treating single quote specially within - double quotes, single-quote the translation of $'...' ansi-c - escaped strings. Original report and fix from Eduardo A. - Bustamante López - -subst.c - - extract_dollar_brace_string: ${word/pat/rep} scanning now sets the - DOLBRACE_QUOTE2 flag instead of DOLBRACE_QUOTE so we don't treat - single quotes specially within a double-quoted string - -execute_cmd.c - - fix_assignment_words: skip over assignment statements preceding a - command word before trying to figure out whether or not assignment - statements following a possible declaration command should be - treated specially. Fixes bug reported by Dan Douglas - - - 4/4 - --- -lib/readline/readline.c - - _rl_dispatch_subseq: only call _rl_vi_set_last (and check whether - the key is a text modification command) if the key sequence length - is 1. That keeps the arrow keys from setting the last command - when called in vi command mode. Fixes bug reported by Ian A. - Watson - - 4/6 - --- -lib/readline/bind.c - - rl_parse_and_bind: when parsing a double-quoted string as the value - of a variable, make sure we skip past the leading double quote. - Fix from Andreas Schwab - -variables.c - - hash_lookup: set new local variable last_table_searched to the table - a successful lookup appears in; tested in make_local_variable to - solve the problem below - - make_local_variable: if we find a variable with the tempenv flag - set at the same `level' as variable_context', but not found in the - temporary_env (temp environment preceding the builtin), return it. - The temp environment preceding the function call has already been - merged (in execute_function) into the list of variable contexts the - function sees as shell_variables by the time this is called. Fixes - inconsistency pointed out by Dan Douglas - -subst.c - - expand_arith_string: expanded out contents of expand_string, - expand_string_internal, expand_string_if_necessary to create a - WORD_DESC and call call_expand_word_internal() on it directly. - We don't want process substitution to be performed ( 1<(2) ) should - mean something different in an arithmetic expression context. - It doesn't work to just turn on the DQUOTE flag, since that means - that things like ${x["expression"]} are not expanded correctly. - Fixes problem pointed out by Dan Douglas - - 4/13 - ---- -subst.c - - process_substitute: run the EXIT trap before exiting, as other - shells seem to. Fixes problem pointed out by Dan Douglas - - -lib/readline/readline.c - - readline_internal_setup: call rl_vi_insertion_mode to enter vi - mode instead of rl_vi_insert_mode to avoid resetting the saved last - command information. Posix says that `.' can repeat a command - that was entered on a previous line so we need to save the info. - Fixes bug reported by Ian A. Watson - - 4/14 - ---- -lib/readline/complete.c - - rl_completion_matches: make sure xrealloc returns something non-null - (can happen when interrupted by a signal) before trying to add - matches to match_list - -subst.c - - array_remove_pattern: return NULL right away if array_variable_part - returns an invisible variable - - array_length_reference: handle array_variable_part returning an - invisible variable - - get_var_and_type: handle array_variable_part returning an invisible - variable - - 4/15 - ---- -execute_cmd.c - - execute_command_internal: make sure to run the EXIT trap for group - commands anywhere in pipelines, not just at the end. From a point - raised by Andreas Schwab - -variables.c - - bind_int_variable: make sure invisible flag is unset. Fixes problems - like "declare -ai a; : $(( a[4]=4 ));" - -arrayfunc.c - - array_variable_part: return variable even if invisible flag set, - callers must handle invisible vars - - 4/18 - ---- -builtins/set.def - - unset_builtin: if -n flag given, call unset_nameref instead of - unset_variable - -variables.c - - find_variable_nameref: print warning message if nameref circular - reference detected, return NULL and let caller deal with it - -builtins/declare.def - - declare_builtin: only disallow global references at this point if - we are at the global scope - - 5/16 - ---- -configure.ac - - update release status to beta - - 5/23 - ---- -trap.c - - run_pending_traps: save and restore pipeline around calls to - evalstring() in case we get a trap while running a trap. Have to - figure out the recursive running traps issue elsewhere. Fixes - bug reported by Roman Rakus - - run_pending_traps: make sure to set running_trap to the appropriate - signal value when running a trap command - - run_pending_traps: short-circuit immediately if running_trap set - when invoked. Could change this later to only skip if it would - run the same trap as currently being run (running_trap == sig + 1) - -configure.ac - - add warning if bison not found - -lib/readline/doc/rltech.texi - - new section with an example program illustrating the callback - interface. Suggested by Peng Yu - -examples/loadables/Makefile.in - - remove references to `cut' and `getconf', which were removed in - early March - - 5/28 - ---- -lib/sh/pathphys.c - - sh_realpath: correct inverted two arguments to call to sh_makepath. - Report and fix from Julien Thomas - - 6/7 - --- -execute_cmd.c - - executing_line_number: the else clauses that are conditional on - various options being defined can simply be if clauses -- they are - mutually exclusive and all have `return' in the body. Fixes bug - reported by Flavio Medeiros - - 6/25 - ---- -lib/readline/readline.c - - readline_internal_setup: only sent the meta-key enable string to the - terminal if we've been told to use one and the terminal has been - successfully initialized (RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_TERMPREPPED) != 0). - Suggested by Dan Mick - -lib/readline/signals.c - - _rl_signal_handler: call any defined signal hook after calling - rl_resize_terminal when handling a SIGWINCH. We already have called - the original SIGWINCH handler but will not be resending the signal - to ourselves - - 6/27 - ---- -lib/readline/doc/history.3, doc/bash.1 - - fix description of the `$' modifier to note that it expands to the - last *word*, which is not always the last argument. Report from - ariyetz@gmail.com via gnu.org RT - - 6/29 - ---- -lib/glob/smatch.c - - glob_asciiranges: initialize to value of GLOBASCII_DEFAULT instead - of 0 (0 if not defined) - -configure.ac,config.h.in - - --enable-glob-asciiranges-default: new option, controls the value of - GLOBASCII_DEFAULT; use it to turn globasciiranges shopt option on - by default - -doc/bashref.texi - - document new --enable-glob-asciiranges-default configure option - -variables.c - - assign_in_env: implement += value appending semantics for assignments - preceding command names - - 7/4 - --- -expr.c - - set lasttok = NUM in all of the functions that result in a number, - even if it's a boolean, to avoid errors with constructs like - 1 * x = 1, which should be an asignment error. Fixes problem - pointed out by Dan Douglas - -parse.y - - decode_prompt_string: don't bother to call strcpy if - polite_directory_format returns its argument unchanged. It's not - necessary and Mac OS X 10.9 aborts because of a supposed overlapping - string copy. Bug and fix from simon@hitzemann.org - -subst.c - - parameter_brace_find_indir: new function, code from - parameter_brace_expand_indir that looks up the indirectly-referenced - variable, but does not expand it - - parameter_brace_expand_indir: call parameter_brace_find_indir to - look up indirected variable reference - - get_var_and_type: call parameter_brace_find_indir if it looks like we - are trying to manipulate an indirect variable reference like - ${!b%%foo}. This makes a difference if !b references an array - variable. Bug report from Dan Douglas - - 7/6 - --- -lib/sh/casemod.c - - sh_modcase: make sure argument passed to is_basic is <= UCHAR_MAX, - since cval can convert something to a wchar_t greater than UCHAR_MAX. - Fixes bug reported by Tomasz Tomasik - - 7/8 - --- -lib/readline/history.c - - add_history_time: if history_length == 0, referencing history_length - - 1 will result in an array bounds error, so make history_length be - at least 1 before going on. Fixes bug reported by Geng Sheng Liu - - -builtins/setattr.def - - show_func_attributes: display definition (if NODEFS argument is 0) and - attributes for a particular function; used by `declare -fp name' - -builtins/declare.def - - declare_internal: call show_func_attributes if -f supplied with -p. - Fixes inconsistency observed by Linda Walsh - -builtins/common.h - - new extern declaration for show_func_attributes - -builtins/read.def - - read_builtin: check the first supplied variable name for validity - before attempting to read any input, since we know we will have to - at least use that one. Don't check any other names yet. Suggested - by jidanni@jidanni.org - - 7/10 - ---- -redir.c - - do_redirection_internal: when closing a file descriptor with - r_close_this ([n]<&-) count close errors as redirection errors if - errno ends up as EIO or ENOSPC. Originally reported back in April - 2012 by Andrey Zaitsev - - 7/11 - ---- -redir.c - - do_redirection_internal: before calling check_bash_input, make sure - that we don't call check_bash_input for an asynchronous process that - is replacing stdin with something else. The seek backwards affects - the parent process as well, since parents and children share the - file pointer. Fixes problem originally reported in March 2013 by - Martin Jackson - - 7/13 - ---- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - slight change to add a description of `shopt -o' suggested by Bruce - Korb - - 7/19 - ---- -lib/readline/histfile.c - - history_do_write: if close returns < 0, make sure we restore the - backup history file and return a non-zero value - - history_truncate_file: if write or close return < 0, make sure we - return a non-zero value - -[bash-4.3-beta frozen] - - 7/21 - ---- -lib/readline/isearch.c - - rl_display_search: now takes an entire search context flags word as - the second argument, instead of just reverse flag; changed callers - - rl_display_search: if the search has failed, add `failed ' to the - beginning of the search prompt - - _rl_isearch_dispatch: if the search has failed, display the entire - search string with an indication that the search failed but with the - last matching line. Suggested by jidanni@jidanni.org - -command.h - - W_ASSIGNINT: new word flag; used internally for make_internal_declare - and set by fix_assignment_words - -execute_cmd.c - - fix_assignment_words: set W_ASSIGNINT if compound assignment and -i - given as option. We don't do anything with the value yet - -subst.c - - shell_expand_word_list: rework the way the option list that is - passed to make_internal_declare is created - - 8/1 - --- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - minor changes to description of $! based on a report from Chris - Down - -arrayfunc.c - - assign_array_element_internal: before trying to get an array's max - index to process a negative subscript, make sure the array exists. - Bug report from Geir Hauge - - 8/2 - --- -arrayfunc.c - - assign_array_element_internal: before using array_max_index() when - processing a negative subscript, make sure the variable is an array. - if it's not, use 0 as array_max_index assuming it's a string. - Fixes bug report from Geir Hauge - - 8/3 - --- -Makefile.in - - pcomplete.o: add dependency on $(DEFDIR)/builtext.h. Suggested by - Curtis Doty - - 8/5 - --- -lib/glob/sm_loop.c - - strcompare: short-circuit and return FNM_NOMATCH if the lengths of the - pattern and string (pe - p and se - s, respectively) are not equal - - strcompare: don't bother trying to set *pe or *se to '\0' if that's - what they already are. Fixes bug reported by Geir Hauge - - - 8/6 - --- -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi},builtins/hash.def,lib/readline/doc/rluser.texi - - minor typo changes from Geir Hauge - -bultins/help.def - - show_longdoc: avoid trying to translate the empty string because it - often translates to some boilerplate about the project and - translation. Report and fix from Geir Hauge - - 8/8 - --- -builtins/help.def - - help_builtin: try two passes through the list of help topics for each - argument: one doing exact string matching and one, if the first pass - fails to find a match, doing string prefix matching like previous - versions. This prevents `help read' from matching both `read' and - `readonly', but allows `help r' to match everything beginning with - `r'. Inspired by report from Geir Hauge - - 8/13 - ---- -builtins/fc.def - - fc_builtin,fc_gethnum: calculate `real' end of the history list and - use it if -0 is specified as the beginning or end of the history - range to list. Doesn't work for fc -e or fc -s by design. Feature - requested by Mike Fied - - 8/16 - ---- -trap.c - - _run_trap_internal: use {save,restore}_parser_state instead of - {save,restore}_token_state. It's more comprehensive - - 8/23 - ---- -doc/bash.1 - - disown: remove repeated text. Report and fix from Thomas Hood - - - 8/25 - ---- -lib/readline/rltty.c - - set_special_char: fix prototype (last arg is rl_command_func_t *) - -sig.c - - set_signal_handler: return oact.sa_handler only if sigaction - succeeds; if it doesn't, return SIG_DFL (reasonable default). From - https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=911404 - -bashline.c - - attempt_shell_completion: fix to skip assignment statements preceding - command name even if there are no programmable completions defined. - From https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=994659 - - attempt_shell_completion: if still completing command word following - assignment statements, do command completion even if programmable - completion defined for partial command name entered so far - - 8/26 - ---- -pcomplete.c - - pcomp_filename_completion_function: make sure rl_filename_dequoting_function - is non-NULL before trying to call it. Bug and fix from - Andreas Schwab - -bashline.c - - bash_command_name_stat_hook: if *name is not something we're going - to look up in $PATH (absolute_program(*name) != 0), just call the - usual bash_filename_stat_hook and return those results. This makes - completions like $PWD/exam[TAB] add a trailing slash - - 9/2 - --- -builtins/read.def - - read_builtin: before comparing what we read to the delim, make sure - we are not supposed to be ignoring the delimiter (read -N). We - set the delim to -1, but it's possible to read a character whose - int value ends up being between -1 and -128. Fixes bug - reported by Stephane Chazelas - -doc/{bash.1,bashref.texi} - - word splitting: crib some language from Posix to make it clear that - characters in IFS are treated as field *terminators*, not field - *separators*. Addresses issue raised by DJ Mills - diff --git a/CWRU/POSIX.NOTES.old b/CWRU/POSIX.NOTES.old deleted file mode 100644 index 1707ab10c..000000000 --- a/CWRU/POSIX.NOTES.old +++ /dev/null @@ -1,82 +0,0 @@ -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 $PWD does not contain any symbolic links, as if - `cd -P' had been executed. - -18. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if a variable - assignment error occurs when no command name follows the assignment - statements. A variable assignment error occurs, for example, when - trying to assign a value to a read-only variable. - -19. A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if the iteration - variable in a for statement or the selection variable in a select - statement is a read-only variable. - -20. Process substitution is not available. - -21. Assignment statements preceding POSIX.2 `special' builtins persist in - the shell environment after the builtin completes. - -There is other Posix.2 behavior that bash does not implement. Specifically: - -1. Assignment statements affect the execution environment of all builtins, - not just special ones. diff --git a/CWRU/old/set.def.save b/CWRU/old/set.def.save deleted file mode 100644 index 87b78d7cc..000000000 --- a/CWRU/old/set.def.save +++ /dev/null @@ -1,544 +0,0 @@ -This file is set.def, from which is created set.c. -It implements the "set" and "unset" builtins in Bash. - -Copyright (C) 1987, 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -This file is part of GNU Bash, the Bourne Again SHell. - -Bash is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under -the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free -Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later -version. - -Bash is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY -WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or -FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License -for more details. - -You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along -with Bash; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software -Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. - -$PRODUCES set.c - -#include -#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); -} diff --git a/CWRU/save/unwind_prot.h.save b/CWRU/save/unwind_prot.h.save deleted file mode 100644 index 998fd72b6..000000000 --- a/CWRU/save/unwind_prot.h.save +++ /dev/null @@ -1,50 +0,0 @@ -/* 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 */ diff --git a/Makefile.in~ b/Makefile.in~ deleted file mode 100644 index 4b5b92d23..000000000 --- a/Makefile.in~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1551 +0,0 @@ -# Makefile for bash-4.3, version 4.10 -# -# Copyright (C) 1996-2012 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 3 of the License, 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, see . - -# Make sure the first target in the makefile is the right one -all: .made - -PACKAGE = @PACKAGE_NAME@ -VERSION = @PACKAGE_VERSION@ - -PACKAGE_BUGREPORT = @PACKAGE_BUGREPORT@ -PACKAGE_NAME = @PACKAGE_NAME@ -PACKAGE_STRING = @PACKAGE_STRING@ -PACKAGE_VERSION = @PACKAGE_VERSION@ - -PACKAGE_TARNAME = @PACKAGE_TARNAME@ - -# Include some boilerplate Gnu makefile definitions. -prefix = @prefix@ - -exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@ - -datarootdir = @datarootdir@ - -bindir = @bindir@ -libdir = @libdir@ -infodir = @infodir@ -includedir = @includedir@ -datadir = @datadir@ -localedir = @localedir@ - -docdir = @docdir@ - -mandir = @mandir@ -manpfx = man - -man1ext = .1 -man1dir = $(mandir)/$(manpfx)1 -man3ext = .3 -man3dir = $(mandir)/$(manpfx)3 - -htmldir = @htmldir@ - -# Support an alternate destination root directory for package building -DESTDIR = - -topdir = @top_srcdir@ -BUILD_DIR = @BUILD_DIR@ -top_builddir = @BUILD_DIR@ -srcdir = @srcdir@ -VPATH = .:@srcdir@ - -@SET_MAKE@ -CC = @CC@ -CC_FOR_BUILD = @CC_FOR_BUILD@ -YACC = @YACC@ -SHELL = @MAKE_SHELL@ -CP = cp -RM = rm -f -AR = @AR@ -ARFLAGS = @ARFLAGS@ -RANLIB = @RANLIB@ -SIZE = @SIZE@ - -INSTALL = @INSTALL@ -INSTALL_PROGRAM = @INSTALL_PROGRAM@ -INSTALL_SCRIPT = @INSTALL_SCRIPT@ -INSTALL_DATA = @INSTALL_DATA@ -INSTALLMODE= -m 0755 -INSTALLMODE2 = -m 0555 - -TESTSCRIPT = @TESTSCRIPT@ - -DEBUGGER_START_FILE = @DEBUGGER_START_FILE@ - -#If you have purify, and want to use it, uncomment this definition or -# run the make as `make PURIFY=purify' -# or run configure with the --with-purify argument. -PURIFY = @PURIFY@ - -# Here is a rule for making .o files from .c files that does not -# force the type of the machine (like -M_MACHINE) into the flags. -.c.o: - $(RM) $@ - $(CC) $(CCFLAGS) -c $< - -EXEEXT = @EXEEXT@ -OBJEXT = @OBJEXT@ - -# The name of this program and some version information. -VERSPROG = bashversion$(EXEEXT) -VERSOBJ = bashversion.$(OBJEXT) - -Program = bash$(EXEEXT) -Version = @BASHVERS@ -PatchLevel = `$(BUILD_DIR)/$(VERSPROG) -p` -RELSTATUS = @RELSTATUS@ - -Machine = @host_cpu@ -OS = @host_os@ -VENDOR = @host_vendor@ -MACHTYPE = @host@ - -# comment out for release -DEBUG = @DEBUG@ -MALLOC_DEBUG = @MALLOC_DEBUG@ - -THIS_SH = $(BUILD_DIR)/$(Program) - -# PROFILE_FLAGS is either -pg, to generate profiling info for use -# with gprof, or nothing (the default). -PROFILE_FLAGS= @PROFILE_FLAGS@ - -CFLAGS = @CFLAGS@ -CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD = @CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD@ @CROSS_COMPILE@ -CPPFLAGS = @CPPFLAGS@ -CPPFLAGS_FOR_BUILD = @CPPFLAGS_FOR_BUILD@ -LOCAL_CFLAGS = @LOCAL_CFLAGS@ ${DEBUG} ${MALLOC_DEBUG} -DEFS = @DEFS@ -LOCAL_DEFS = @LOCAL_DEFS@ - -LOCALE_DEFS = -DLOCALEDIR='"$(localedir)"' -DPACKAGE='"$(PACKAGE)"' - -LOCAL_LIBS = @LOCAL_LIBS@ -LIBS = $(BUILTINS_LIB) $(LIBRARIES) @LIBS@ -LIBS_FOR_BUILD = - -STATIC_LD = @STATIC_LD@ -LOCAL_LDFLAGS = @LOCAL_LDFLAGS@ - -SYSTEM_FLAGS = -DPROGRAM='"$(Program)"' -DCONF_HOSTTYPE='"$(Machine)"' -DCONF_OSTYPE='"$(OS)"' -DCONF_MACHTYPE='"$(MACHTYPE)"' -DCONF_VENDOR='"$(VENDOR)"' $(LOCALE_DEFS) - -BASE_CCFLAGS = $(PROFILE_FLAGS) $(SYSTEM_FLAGS) $(LOCAL_DEFS) \ - $(DEFS) $(LOCAL_CFLAGS) $(INCLUDES) - -CCFLAGS = $(BASE_CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) - -CCFLAGS_FOR_BUILD = $(BASE_CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS_FOR_BUILD) $(CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD) - -LDFLAGS = @LDFLAGS@ $(STATIC_LD) $(LOCAL_LDFLAGS) $(PROFILE_FLAGS) $(CFLAGS) -LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD = @LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD@ $(LOCAL_LDFLAGS) $(CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD) - -INCLUDES = -I. @RL_INCLUDE@ -I$(srcdir) -I$(BASHINCDIR) -I$(LIBSRC) $(INTL_INC) - -# Maybe add: -Wextra -GCC_LINT_FLAGS = -O -Wall -Wshadow -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wno-parentheses \ - -Wcast-align -Wstrict-prototypes -Wconversion -Wformat \ - -Wformat-nonliteral -Wmissing-braces -Wuninitialized \ - -Wmissing-declarations -Winline \ - -Wmissing-prototypes -Wtraditional -Wredundant-decls -pedantic - -GCC_LINT_CFLAGS = $(BASE_CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(GCC_LINT_FLAGS) - -# -# Support libraries -# - -dot = . - -LIBSUBDIR = lib -LIBSRC = $(srcdir)/$(LIBSUBDIR) - -LIBBUILD = ${BUILD_DIR}/${LIBSUBDIR} - -SUBDIR_INCLUDES = -I. @RL_INCLUDE@ -I$(topdir) -I$(topdir)/$(LIBSUBDIR) - -BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL = @BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL@ -USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL = @USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL@ - -# the bash library -# the library is a mix of functions that the C library does not provide on -# some platforms and general shell utility functions -SH_LIBSRC = $(LIBSRC)/sh -SH_LIBDIR = $(dot)/${LIBSUBDIR}/sh -SH_ABSSRC = ${topdir}/${SH_LIBSRC} - 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-pathexp.o: $(GLOB_LIBSRC)/glob.h $(GLOB_LIBSRC)/strmatch.h -pathexp.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbutil.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbchar.h -print_cmd.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -print_cmd.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -print_cmd.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -print_cmd.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -print_cmd.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -print_cmd.o: ${GRAM_H} $(DEFSRC)/common.h -redir.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h -redir.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -redir.o: general.h xmalloc.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h -redir.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -redir.o: flags.h execute_cmd.h redir.h input.h -shell.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h -shell.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -shell.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -shell.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -shell.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -shell.o: flags.h trap.h mailcheck.h builtins.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -shell.o: jobs.h siglist.h input.h execute_cmd.h findcmd.h bashhist.h bashline.h -shell.o: ${GLOB_LIBSRC}/strmatch.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixtime.h -sig.o: config.h bashtypes.h -sig.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -sig.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -sig.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -sig.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -sig.o: jobs.h siglist.h trap.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h bashline.h bashhist.h -siglist.o: config.h bashtypes.h siglist.h trap.h -stringlib.o: bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -stringlib.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -stringlib.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -stringlib.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -stringlib.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -stringlib.o: ${GLOB_LIBSRC}/glob.h ${GLOB_LIBSRC}/strmatch.h -subst.o: config.h bashtypes.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h -subst.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -subst.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -subst.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -subst.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h parser.h -subst.o: flags.h jobs.h siglist.h execute_cmd.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h trap.h pathexp.h -subst.o: mailcheck.h input.h $(DEFSRC)/getopt.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -subst.o: bashline.h bashhist.h ${GLOB_LIBSRC}/strmatch.h -subst.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -subst.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbutil.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbchar.h -subst.o: ${DEFDIR}/builtext.h -test.o: bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h -test.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -test.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -test.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -test.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h test.h -test.o: ${DEFSRC}/common.h -trap.o: config.h bashtypes.h trap.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -trap.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -trap.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -trap.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -trap.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -trap.o: signames.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -trap.o: ${DEFDIR}/builtext.h jobs.h -unwind_prot.o: config.h bashtypes.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -unwind_prot.o: general.h xmalloc.h unwind_prot.h quit.h sig.h -variables.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -variables.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -variables.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -variables.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -variables.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -variables.o: flags.h execute_cmd.h mailcheck.h input.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -variables.o: findcmd.h bashhist.h hashcmd.h pathexp.h -variables.o: pcomplete.h ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -variables.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/posixtime.h assoc.h -variables.o: version.h -version.o: conftypes.h patchlevel.h version.h -xmalloc.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h error.h - -# job control - -jobs.o: config.h bashtypes.h trap.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h input.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shtty.h -jobs.o: bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -jobs.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -jobs.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -jobs.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -jobs.o: execute_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -jobs.o: jobs.h flags.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h $(DEFDIR)/builtext.h -jobs.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/posixwait.h ${BASHINCDIR}/unionwait.h -jobs.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/posixtime.h -nojobs.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h -nojobs.o: command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h general.h xmalloc.h jobs.h quit.h siglist.h externs.h -nojobs.o: sig.h error.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shtty.h input.h -nojobs.o: $(DEFDIR)/builtext.h - -# shell features that may be compiled in - -array.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -array.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -array.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -array.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -array.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -array.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h -arrayfunc.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -arrayfunc.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -arrayfunc.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -arrayfunc.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -arrayfunc.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h pathexp.h -arrayfunc.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h -arrayfunc.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbutil.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbchar.h -assoc.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -assoc.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h -assoc.o: command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -assoc.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -assoc.o: assoc.h hashlib.h -assoc.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -assoc.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -assoc.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h -braces.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -braces.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -braces.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -braces.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -braces.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -braces.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbutil.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbchar.h -alias.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -alias.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h externs.h alias.h -alias.o: pcomplete.h -alias.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h - -pcomplib.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h bashtypes.h -pcomplib.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h hashlib.h pcomplete.h shell.h syntax.h -pcomplib.o: bashjmp.h command.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -pcomplib.o: unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h -pcomplib.o: externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h - -pcomplete.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h bashtypes.h -pcomplete.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h hashlib.h pcomplete.h shell.h syntax.h -pcomplete.o: bashjmp.h command.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -pcomplete.o: unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h -pcomplete.o: externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h execute_cmd.h - -# library support files - -bashhist.o: config.h bashtypes.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h -bashhist.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h -bashhist.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -bashhist.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -bashhist.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -bashhist.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -bashhist.o: flags.h input.h parser.h pathexp.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h bashline.h -bashhist.o: $(GLOB_LIBSRC)/strmatch.h -bashline.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -bashline.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -bashline.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h array.h hashlib.h -bashline.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -bashline.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -bashline.o: builtins.h bashhist.h bashline.h execute_cmd.h findcmd.h pathexp.h -bashline.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h $(GLOB_LIBSRC)/glob.h alias.h -bashline.o: pcomplete.h ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h input.h -bashline.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbutil.h ${BASHINCDIR}/shmbchar.h -bracecomp.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -bracecomp.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h -bracecomp.o: command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h error.h -bracecomp.o: general.h xmalloc.h bashtypes.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -bracecomp.o: array.h hashlib.h alias.h builtins.h -bracecomp.o: quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -bracecomp.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h - -# library dependencies - -bashline.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlconf.h -bashline.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/keymaps.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -bashline.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/chardefs.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/readline.h -bracecomp.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/keymaps.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/chardefs.h -bracecomp.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/readline.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -y.tab.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/keymaps.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/chardefs.h -y.tab.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/readline.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -subst.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/keymaps.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/chardefs.h -subst.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/readline.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h - -shell.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(HIST_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -subst.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(HIST_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -bashline.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(HIST_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -bashhist.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(HIST_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -y.tab.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(HIST_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h - -execute_cmd.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -general.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -mailcheck.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -shell.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -subst.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -variables.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h - -# libintl dependencies -arrayfunc.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -bashhist.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -bashline.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -braces.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -error.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -eval.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -execute_cmd.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -expr.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -general.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -input.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -jobs.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -mailcheck.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -make_cmd.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -nojobs.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -y.tab.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -pcomplete.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -pcomplib.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -print_cmd.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -redir.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -shell.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -sig.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -siglist.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -subst.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -test.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -trap.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -variables.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -version.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -xmalloc.o: bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h - -signames.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h - -# XXX - dependencies checked through here - -# builtin c sources -builtins/bashgetopt.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -builtins/bashgetopt.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h command.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h -builtins/bashgetopt.o: variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -builtins/bashgetopt.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -builtins/bashgetopt.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h -builtins/bashgetopt.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -builtins/common.o: bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -builtins/common.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h command.h -builtins/common.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h input.h siglist.h -builtins/common.o: quit.h unwind_prot.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h jobs.h builtins.h -builtins/common.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h bashhist.h -builtins/common.o: execute_cmd.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h pathnames.h -builtins/common.o: ${DEFDIR}/builtext.h -builtins/common.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -builtins/evalfile.o: bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -builtins/evalfile.o: shell.h syntax.h config.h bashjmp.h command.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h -builtins/evalfile.o: variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -builtins/evalfile.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -builtins/evalfile.o: jobs.h builtins.h flags.h input.h execute_cmd.h -builtins/evalfile.o: bashhist.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -builtins/evalstring.o: config.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -builtins/evalstring.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h command.h siglist.h -builtins/evalstring.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h input.h -builtins/evalstring.o: quit.h unwind_prot.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h jobs.h builtins.h -builtins/evalstring.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h -builtins/evalstring.o: jobs.h builtins.h flags.h input.h execute_cmd.h -builtins/evalstring.o: bashhist.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h pathnames.h -builtins/getopt.o: config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h -builtins/getopt.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h command.h general.h xmalloc.h error.h -builtins/getopt.o: variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h unwind_prot.h dispose_cmd.h -builtins/getopt.o: make_cmd.h subst.h sig.h pathnames.h externs.h -builtins/getopt.o: $(DEFSRC)/getopt.h -builtins/mkbuiltins.o: config.h bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h -builtins/mkbuiltins.o: bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h - -# builtin def files -builtins/alias.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/alias.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h pathnames.h -builtins/alias.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h unwind_prot.h -builtins/alias.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/bind.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/bind.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/bind.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/bind.o: $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h pathnames.h -builtins/break.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/break.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/break.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/break.o: pathnames.h -builtins/builtin.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/builtin.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/builtin.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/builtin.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/builtin.o: pathnames.h -builtins/caller.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/caller.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/caller.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/caller.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h quit.h -builtins/caller.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h bashtypes.h -builtins/caller.o: ${DEFDIR}/builtext.h pathnames.h -builtins/cd.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/cd.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/cd.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/cd.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h quit.h pathnames.h -builtins/command.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/command.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/command.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/command.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h pathnames.h -builtins/declare.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/declare.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/declare.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/declare.o: $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h pathnames.h -builtins/echo.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/echo.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/echo.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/echo.o: pathnames.h -builtins/enable.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/enable.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/enable.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/enable.o: pcomplete.h pathnames.h -builtins/eval.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/eval.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/eval.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/eval.o: pathnames.h -builtins/exec.o: bashtypes.h pathnames.h -builtins/exec.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/exec.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/exec.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h execute_cmd.h -builtins/exec.o: findcmd.h flags.h quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/exec.o: pathnames.h -builtins/exit.o: bashtypes.h -builtins/exit.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/exit.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/exit.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/exit.o: pathnames.h -builtins/fc.o: bashtypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixstat.h -builtins/fc.o: bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h builtins.h command.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/fc.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/fc.o: flags.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h -builtins/fc.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h quit.h -builtins/fc.o: $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h bashhist.h pathnames.h -builtins/fc.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: bashtypes.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: pathnames.h -builtins/getopts.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/getopts.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/getopts.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/getopts.o: pathnames.h -builtins/hash.o: bashtypes.h -builtins/hash.o: builtins.h command.h findcmd.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -builtins/hash.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/hash.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/hash.o: pathnames.h -builtins/help.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/help.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/help.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/help.o: $(GLOB_LIBSRC)/glob.h pathnames.h -builtins/history.o: bashtypes.h pathnames.h -builtins/history.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/history.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/history.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/filecntl.h shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h -builtins/history.o: bashhist.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/inlib.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/inlib.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h quit.h -builtins/inlib.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/inlib.o: pathnames.h -builtins/jobs.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/jobs.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/jobs.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/jobs.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/jobs.o: pathnames.h -builtins/kill.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/kill.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/kill.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h trap.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/kill.o: pathnames.h -builtins/let.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/let.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/let.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/let.o: pathnames.h -builtins/printf.o: config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h bashjmp.h command.h error.h -builtins/printf.o: general.h xmalloc.h quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h -builtins/printf.o: externs.h sig.h pathnames.h shell.h syntax.h unwind_prot.h -builtins/printf.o: variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/printf.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h -builtins/pushd.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/pushd.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/pushd.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/pushd.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h pathnames.h -builtins/read.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/read.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/read.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/read.o: pathnames.h -builtins/return.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/return.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/return.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/return.o: pathnames.h -builtins/set.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/set.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/set.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h flags.h -builtins/set.o: pathnames.h -builtins/setattr.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/setattr.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h -builtins/setattr.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/setattr.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/setattr.o: pathnames.h -builtins/shift.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/shift.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/shift.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/shift.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/shift.o: pathnames.h -builtins/shopt.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h -builtins/shopt.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h -builtins/shopt.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/shopt.o: $(DEFSRC)/common.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h pathnames.h -builtins/shopt.o: bashhist.h bashline.h -builtins/source.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/source.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/source.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/source.o: findcmd.h $(DEFSRC)/bashgetopt.h flags.h trap.h -builtins/source.o: pathnames.h -builtins/suspend.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/suspend.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/suspend.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/suspend.o: pathnames.h -builtins/test.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/test.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/test.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/test.o: test.h pathnames.h -builtins/times.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/times.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/times.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/times.o: pathnames.h -builtins/trap.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/trap.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h -builtins/trap.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/trap.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/trap.o: pathnames.h -builtins/type.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/type.o: quit.h $(DEFSRC)/common.h findcmd.h -builtins/type.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/type.o: dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/type.o: pathnames.h -builtins/ulimit.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/ulimit.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/ulimit.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/ulimit.o: pathnames.h -builtins/umask.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/umask.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/umask.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/umask.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h pathnames.h -builtins/wait.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/wait.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/wait.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/wait.o: ${BASHINCDIR}/chartypes.h pathnames.h - -builtins/complete.o: config.h shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h -builtins/complete.o: unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/complete.o: bashtypes.h bashansi.h ${BASHINCDIR}/ansi_stdlib.h -builtins/complete.o: builtins.h pathnames.h -builtins/complete.o: pcomplete.h -builtins/complete.o: ${DEFSRC}/common.h ${DEFSRC}/bashgetopt.h -builtins/mapfile.o: command.h config.h ${BASHINCDIR}/memalloc.h error.h general.h xmalloc.h ${BASHINCDIR}/maxpath.h -builtins/mapfile.o: quit.h dispose_cmd.h make_cmd.h subst.h externs.h ${BASHINCDIR}/stdc.h -builtins/mapfile.o: shell.h syntax.h bashjmp.h ${BASHINCDIR}/posixjmp.h sig.h unwind_prot.h variables.h arrayfunc.h conftypes.h -builtins/mapfile.o: pathnames.h - -# libintl dependencies -builtins/bind.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/break.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/caller.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/cd.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/common.c: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/complete.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/declare.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/enable.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/evalfile.c: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/exec.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/exit.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/fc.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/fg_bg.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/getopt.c: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/hash.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/help.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/history.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/inlib.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/jobs.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/kill.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/let.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/mapfile.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/mkbuiltins.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/printf.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/pushd.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/read.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/return.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/set.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/setattr.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/shift.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/shopt.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/source.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/suspend.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/type.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/ulimit.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h -builtins/umask.o: ${topdir}/bashintl.h ${LIBINTL_H} $(BASHINCDIR)/gettext.h - -# builtin library dependencies -builtins/bind.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/chardefs.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/readline.h -builtins/bind.o: $(RL_LIBSRC)/keymaps.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h - -builtins/bind.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -builtins/fc.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h -builtins/history.o: $(HIST_LIBSRC)/history.h $(RL_LIBSRC)/rlstdc.h - -builtins/common.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h -builtins/cd.o: $(TILDE_LIBSRC)/tilde.h - -builtins/alias.o: $(DEFSRC)/alias.def -builtins/bind.o: $(DEFSRC)/bind.def -builtins/break.o: $(DEFSRC)/break.def -builtins/builtin.o: $(DEFSRC)/builtin.def -builtins/caller.o: $(DEFSRC)/caller.def -builtins/cd.o: $(DEFSRC)/cd.def -builtins/colon.o: $(DEFSRC)/colon.def -builtins/command.o: $(DEFSRC)/command.def -builtins/complete.o: $(DEFSRC)/complete.def -builtins/declare.o: $(DEFSRC)/declare.def -builtins/echo.o: $(DEFSRC)/echo.def -builtins/enable.o: $(DEFSRC)/enable.def -builtins/eval.o: $(DEFSRC)/eval.def -builtins/exec.o: $(DEFSRC)/exec.def -builtins/exit.o: $(DEFSRC)/exit.def -builtins/fc.o: $(DEFSRC)/fc.def -builtins/fg_bg.o: $(DEFSRC)/fg_bg.def -builtins/getopts.o: $(DEFSRC)/getopts.def -builtins/hash.o: $(DEFSRC)/hash.def -builtins/help.o: $(DEFSRC)/help.def -builtins/history.o: $(DEFSRC)/history.def -builtins/inlib.o: $(DEFSRC)/inlib.def -builtins/jobs.o: $(DEFSRC)/jobs.def -builtins/kill.o: $(DEFSRC)/kill.def -builtins/let.o: $(DEFSRC)/let.def -builtins/mapfile.o: $(DEFSRC)/mapfile.def -builtins/pushd.o: $(DEFSRC)/pushd.def -builtins/read.o: $(DEFSRC)/read.def -builtins/reserved.o: $(DEFSRC)/reserved.def -builtins/return.o: $(DEFSRC)/return.def -builtins/set.o: $(DEFSRC)/set.def -builtins/setattr.o: $(DEFSRC)/setattr.def -builtins/shift.o: $(DEFSRC)/shift.def -builtins/shopt.o: $(DEFSRC)/shopt.def -builtins/source.o: $(DEFSRC)/source.def -builtins/suspend.o: $(DEFSRC)/suspend.def -builtins/test.o: $(DEFSRC)/test.def -builtins/times.o: $(DEFSRC)/times.def -builtins/trap.o: $(DEFSRC)/trap.def -builtins/type.o: $(DEFSRC)/type.def -builtins/ulimit.o: $(DEFSRC)/ulimit.def -builtins/umask.o: $(DEFSRC)/umask.def -builtins/wait.o: $(DEFSRC)/wait.def diff --git a/bashline.c.orig b/bashline.c.orig deleted file mode 100644 index c9c19de6d..000000000 --- a/bashline.c.orig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,4156 +0,0 @@ -/* bashline.c -- Bash's interface to the readline library. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_GRP_H) -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_NETDB_H) -# include -#endif - -#include - -#include -#include "chartypes.h" -#include "bashansi.h" -#include "bashintl.h" - -#include "shell.h" -#include "input.h" -#include "builtins.h" -#include "bashhist.h" -#include "bashline.h" -#include "execute_cmd.h" -#include "findcmd.h" -#include "pathexp.h" -#include "shmbutil.h" - -#include "builtins/common.h" - -#include -#include -#include - -#include - -#if defined (ALIAS) -# include "alias.h" -#endif - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -# include "pcomplete.h" -#endif - -/* These should agree with the defines for emacs_mode and vi_mode in - rldefs.h, even though that's not a public readline header file. */ -#ifndef EMACS_EDITING_MODE -# define NO_EDITING_MODE -1 -# define EMACS_EDITING_MODE 1 -# define VI_EDITING_MODE 0 -#endif - -#define RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE(s) ((s)[0] == 'o' && (s)[1] == 'n' && (s)[2] == '\0') - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) -extern int bash_brace_completion __P((int, int)); -#endif /* BRACE_COMPLETION */ - -/* To avoid including curses.h/term.h/termcap.h and that whole mess. */ -#ifdef _MINIX -extern int tputs __P((const char *string, int nlines, void (*outx)(int))); -#else -extern int tputs __P((const char *string, int nlines, int (*outx)(int))); -#endif - -/* Forward declarations */ - -/* Functions bound to keys in Readline for Bash users. */ -static int shell_expand_line __P((int, int)); -static int display_shell_version __P((int, int)); -static int operate_and_get_next __P((int, int)); - -static int bash_ignore_filenames __P((char **)); -static int bash_ignore_everything __P((char **)); - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -static char *history_expand_line_internal __P((char *)); -static int history_expand_line __P((int, int)); -static int tcsh_magic_space __P((int, int)); -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ -#ifdef ALIAS -static int alias_expand_line __P((int, int)); -#endif -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) && defined (ALIAS) -static int history_and_alias_expand_line __P((int, int)); -#endif - -static int bash_forward_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_backward_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_kill_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_backward_kill_shellword __P((int, int)); - -/* Helper functions for Readline. */ -static char *restore_tilde __P((char *, char *)); - -static char *bash_filename_rewrite_hook __P((char *, int)); - -static void bash_directory_expansion __P((char **)); -static int bash_filename_stat_hook __P((char **)); -static int bash_command_name_stat_hook __P((char **)); -static int bash_directory_completion_hook __P((char **)); -static int filename_completion_ignore __P((char **)); -static int bash_push_line __P((void)); - -static int executable_completion __P((const char *, int)); - -static rl_icppfunc_t *save_directory_hook __P((void)); -static void restore_directory_hook __P((rl_icppfunc_t)); - -static void cleanup_expansion_error __P((void)); -static void maybe_make_readline_line __P((char *)); -static void set_up_new_line __P((char *)); - -static int check_redir __P((int)); -static char **attempt_shell_completion __P((const char *, int, int)); -static char *variable_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); -static char *hostname_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); -static char *command_subst_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); - -static void build_history_completion_array __P((void)); -static char *history_completion_generator __P((const char *, int)); -static int dynamic_complete_history __P((int, int)); -static int bash_dabbrev_expand __P((int, int)); - -static void initialize_hostname_list __P((void)); -static void add_host_name __P((char *)); -static void snarf_hosts_from_file __P((char *)); -static char **hostnames_matching __P((char *)); - -static void _ignore_completion_names __P((char **, sh_ignore_func_t *)); -static int name_is_acceptable __P((const char *)); -static int test_for_directory __P((const char *)); -static int return_zero __P((const char *)); - -static char *bash_dequote_filename __P((char *, int)); -static char *quote_word_break_chars __P((char *)); -static void set_filename_bstab __P((const char *)); -static char *bash_quote_filename __P((char *, int, char *)); - -#ifdef _MINIX -static void putx __P((int)); -#else -static int putx __P((int)); -#endif -static int bash_execute_unix_command __P((int, int)); -static void init_unix_command_map __P((void)); -static int isolate_sequence __P((char *, int, int, int *)); - -static int set_saved_history __P((void)); - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static int posix_edit_macros __P((int, int)); -#endif - -static int bash_event_hook __P((void)); - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -static int find_cmd_start __P((int)); -static int find_cmd_end __P((int)); -static char *find_cmd_name __P((int, int *, int *)); -static char *prog_complete_return __P((const char *, int)); - -static char **prog_complete_matches; -#endif - -/* Variables used here but defined in other files. */ -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -extern int hist_verify; -#endif - -extern int current_command_line_count, saved_command_line_count; -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern int array_needs_making; -extern int posixly_correct, no_symbolic_links; -extern char *current_prompt_string, *ps1_prompt; -extern STRING_INT_ALIST word_token_alist[]; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *last_shell_builtin, *this_shell_builtin; - -/* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS specifies that we have individual - completion functions which indicate what type of completion should be - done (at or before point) that can be bound to key sequences with - the readline library. */ -#define SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) -static int bash_specific_completion __P((int, rl_compentry_func_t *)); - -static int bash_complete_filename_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_username_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_hostname_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_variable_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_command_internal __P((int)); - -static int bash_complete_filename __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_filename_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_username __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_username_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_hostname __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_hostname_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_variable __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_variable_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_command __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_command_completions __P((int, int)); - -static char *glob_complete_word __P((const char *, int)); -static int bash_glob_completion_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_glob_complete_word __P((int, int)); -static int bash_glob_expand_word __P((int, int)); -static int bash_glob_list_expansions __P((int, int)); - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - -static int edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int, int, char *)); -#if defined (VI_MODE) -static int vi_edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int)); -static int bash_vi_complete __P((int, int)); -#endif -static int emacs_edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int)); - -/* Non-zero once initalize_readline () has been called. */ -int bash_readline_initialized = 0; - -/* If non-zero, we do hostname completion, breaking words at `@' and - trying to complete the stuff after the `@' from our own internal - host list. */ -int perform_hostname_completion = 1; - -/* If non-zero, we don't do command completion on an empty line. */ -int no_empty_command_completion; - -/* Set FORCE_FIGNORE if you want to honor FIGNORE even if it ignores the - only possible matches. Set to 0 if you want to match filenames if they - are the only possible matches, even if FIGNORE says to. */ -int force_fignore = 1; - -/* Perform spelling correction on directory names during word completion */ -int dircomplete_spelling = 0; - -/* Expand directory names during word/filename completion. */ -#if DIRCOMPLETE_EXPAND_DEFAULT -int dircomplete_expand = 1; -int dircomplete_expand_relpath = 1; -#else -int dircomplete_expand = 0; -int dircomplete_expand_relpath = 0; -#endif - -/* When non-zero, perform `normal' shell quoting on completed filenames - even when the completed name contains a directory name with a shell - variable referene, so dollar signs in a filename get quoted appropriately. - Set to zero to remove dollar sign (and braces or parens as needed) from - the set of characters that will be quoted. */ -int complete_fullquote = 1; - -static char *bash_completer_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"'@><=;|&(:"; -static char *bash_nohostname_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"'><=;|&(:"; -/* )) */ - -static const char *default_filename_quote_characters = " \t\n\\\"'@<>=;|&()#$`?*[!:{~"; /*}*/ -static char *custom_filename_quote_characters = 0; -static char filename_bstab[256]; - -static rl_hook_func_t *old_rl_startup_hook = (rl_hook_func_t *)NULL; - -static int dot_in_path = 0; - -/* Set to non-zero when dabbrev-expand is running */ -static int dabbrev_expand_active = 0; - -/* What kind of quoting is performed by bash_quote_filename: - COMPLETE_DQUOTE = double-quoting the filename - COMPLETE_SQUOTE = single_quoting the filename - COMPLETE_BSQUOTE = backslash-quoting special chars in the filename -*/ -#define COMPLETE_DQUOTE 1 -#define COMPLETE_SQUOTE 2 -#define COMPLETE_BSQUOTE 3 -static int completion_quoting_style = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - -/* Flag values for the final argument to bash_default_completion */ -#define DEFCOMP_CMDPOS 1 - -/* Change the readline VI-mode keymaps into or out of Posix.2 compliance. - Called when the shell is put into or out of `posix' mode. */ -void -posix_readline_initialize (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - if (on_or_off) - rl_variable_bind ("comment-begin", "#"); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_bind_key_in_map (CTRL ('I'), on_or_off ? rl_insert : rl_complete, vi_insertion_keymap); -#endif -} - -void -reset_completer_word_break_chars () -{ - rl_completer_word_break_characters = perform_hostname_completion ? savestring (bash_completer_word_break_characters) : savestring (bash_nohostname_word_break_characters); -} - -/* When this function returns, rl_completer_word_break_characters points to - dynamically allocated memory. */ -int -enable_hostname_completion (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - int old_value; - char *at, *nv, *nval; - - old_value = perform_hostname_completion; - - if (on_or_off) - { - perform_hostname_completion = 1; - rl_special_prefixes = "$@"; - } - else - { - perform_hostname_completion = 0; - rl_special_prefixes = "$"; - } - - /* Now we need to figure out how to appropriately modify and assign - rl_completer_word_break_characters depending on whether we want - hostname completion on or off. */ - - /* If this is the first time this has been called - (bash_readline_initialized == 0), use the sames values as before, but - allocate new memory for rl_completer_word_break_characters. */ - - if (bash_readline_initialized == 0 && - (rl_completer_word_break_characters == 0 || - rl_completer_word_break_characters == rl_basic_word_break_characters)) - { - if (on_or_off) - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (bash_completer_word_break_characters); - else - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (bash_nohostname_word_break_characters); - } - else - { - /* See if we have anything to do. */ - at = strchr (rl_completer_word_break_characters, '@'); - if ((at == 0 && on_or_off == 0) || (at != 0 && on_or_off != 0)) - return old_value; - - /* We have something to do. Do it. */ - nval = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (rl_completer_word_break_characters) + 1 + on_or_off); - - if (on_or_off == 0) - { - /* Turn it off -- just remove `@' from word break chars. We want - to remove all occurrences of `@' from the char list, so we loop - rather than just copy the rest of the list over AT. */ - for (nv = nval, at = rl_completer_word_break_characters; *at; ) - if (*at != '@') - *nv++ = *at++; - else - at++; - *nv = '\0'; - } - else - { - nval[0] = '@'; - strcpy (nval + 1, rl_completer_word_break_characters); - } - - free (rl_completer_word_break_characters); - rl_completer_word_break_characters = nval; - } - - return (old_value); -} - -/* Called once from parse.y if we are going to use readline. */ -void -initialize_readline () -{ - rl_command_func_t *func; - char kseq[2]; - - if (bash_readline_initialized) - return; - - rl_terminal_name = get_string_value ("TERM"); - rl_instream = stdin; - rl_outstream = stderr; - - /* Allow conditional parsing of the ~/.inputrc file. */ - rl_readline_name = "Bash"; - - /* Add bindable names before calling rl_initialize so they may be - referenced in the various inputrc files. */ - rl_add_defun ("shell-expand-line", shell_expand_line, -1); -#ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_add_defun ("history-expand-line", history_expand_line, -1); - rl_add_defun ("magic-space", tcsh_magic_space, -1); -#endif - - rl_add_defun ("shell-forward-word", bash_forward_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-backward-word", bash_backward_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-kill-word", bash_kill_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-backward-kill-word", bash_backward_kill_shellword, -1); - -#ifdef ALIAS - rl_add_defun ("alias-expand-line", alias_expand_line, -1); -# ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_add_defun ("history-and-alias-expand-line", history_and_alias_expand_line, -1); -# endif -#endif - - /* Backwards compatibility. */ - rl_add_defun ("insert-last-argument", rl_yank_last_arg, -1); - - rl_add_defun ("operate-and-get-next", operate_and_get_next, -1); - rl_add_defun ("display-shell-version", display_shell_version, -1); - rl_add_defun ("edit-and-execute-command", emacs_edit_and_execute_command, -1); - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) - rl_add_defun ("complete-into-braces", bash_brace_completion, -1); -#endif - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - rl_add_defun ("complete-filename", bash_complete_filename, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-filename-completions", bash_possible_filename_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-username", bash_complete_username, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-username-completions", bash_possible_username_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-hostname", bash_complete_hostname, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-hostname-completions", bash_possible_hostname_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-variable", bash_complete_variable, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-variable-completions", bash_possible_variable_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-command", bash_complete_command, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-command-completions", bash_possible_command_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-complete-word", bash_glob_complete_word, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-expand-word", bash_glob_expand_word, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-list-expansions", bash_glob_list_expansions, -1); -#endif - - rl_add_defun ("dynamic-complete-history", dynamic_complete_history, -1); - rl_add_defun ("dabbrev-expand", bash_dabbrev_expand, -1); - - /* Bind defaults before binding our custom shell keybindings. */ - if (RL_ISSTATE(RL_STATE_INITIALIZED) == 0) - rl_initialize (); - - /* Bind up our special shell functions. */ - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL('E'), shell_expand_line, emacs_meta_keymap); - -#ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('^', history_expand_line, emacs_meta_keymap); -#endif - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('O'), operate_and_get_next, emacs_standard_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('V'), display_shell_version, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - /* In Bash, the user can switch editing modes with "set -o [vi emacs]", - so it is not necessary to allow C-M-j for context switching. Turn - off this occasionally confusing behaviour. */ - kseq[0] = CTRL('J'); - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == rl_vi_editing_mode) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('J'), emacs_meta_keymap); - kseq[0] = CTRL('M'); - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == rl_vi_editing_mode) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('M'), emacs_meta_keymap); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('E'), vi_movement_keymap); -#endif - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('{', bash_brace_completion, emacs_meta_keymap); /*}*/ -#endif /* BRACE_COMPLETION */ - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('/', bash_complete_filename, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('/', bash_possible_filename_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - /* Have to jump through hoops here because there is a default binding for - M-~ (rl_tilde_expand) */ - kseq[0] = '~'; - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == 0 || func == rl_tilde_expand) - rl_bind_keyseq_in_map (kseq, bash_complete_username, emacs_meta_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('~', bash_possible_username_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', bash_complete_hostname, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', bash_possible_hostname_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('$', bash_complete_variable, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('$', bash_possible_variable_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('!', bash_complete_command, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('!', bash_possible_command_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('g', bash_glob_complete_word, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('*', bash_glob_expand_word, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('g', bash_glob_list_expansions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - - kseq[0] = TAB; - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == 0 || func == rl_tab_insert) - rl_bind_key_in_map (TAB, dynamic_complete_history, emacs_meta_keymap); - - /* Tell the completer that we want a crack first. */ - rl_attempted_completion_function = attempt_shell_completion; - - /* Tell the completer that we might want to follow symbolic links or - do other expansion on directory names. */ - set_directory_hook (); - - rl_filename_rewrite_hook = bash_filename_rewrite_hook; - - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - /* Tell the filename completer we want a chance to ignore some names. */ - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - /* Bind C-xC-e to invoke emacs and run result as commands. */ - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('E'), emacs_edit_and_execute_command, emacs_ctlx_keymap); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('v', vi_edit_and_execute_command, vi_movement_keymap); -# if defined (ALIAS) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', posix_edit_macros, vi_movement_keymap); -# endif - - rl_bind_key_in_map ('\\', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); - rl_bind_key_in_map ('*', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); - rl_bind_key_in_map ('=', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); -#endif - - rl_completer_quote_characters = "'\""; - - /* This sets rl_completer_word_break_characters and rl_special_prefixes - to the appropriate values, depending on whether or not hostname - completion is enabled. */ - enable_hostname_completion (perform_hostname_completion); - - /* characters that need to be quoted when appearing in filenames. */ - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - - rl_filename_quoting_function = bash_quote_filename; - rl_filename_dequoting_function = bash_dequote_filename; - rl_char_is_quoted_p = char_is_quoted; - -#if 0 - /* This is superfluous and makes it impossible to use tab completion in - vi mode even when explicitly binding it in ~/.inputrc. sv_strict_posix() - should already have called posix_readline_initialize() when - posixly_correct was set. */ - if (posixly_correct) - posix_readline_initialize (1); -#endif - - bash_readline_initialized = 1; -} - -void -bashline_reinitialize () -{ - bash_readline_initialized = 0; -} - -void -bashline_set_event_hook () -{ - rl_signal_event_hook = bash_event_hook; -} - -void -bashline_reset_event_hook () -{ - rl_signal_event_hook = 0; -} - -/* On Sun systems at least, rl_attempted_completion_function can end up - getting set to NULL, and rl_completion_entry_function set to do command - word completion if Bash is interrupted while trying to complete a command - word. This just resets all the completion functions to the right thing. - It's called from throw_to_top_level(). */ -void -bashline_reset () -{ - tilde_initialize (); - rl_attempted_completion_function = attempt_shell_completion; - rl_completion_entry_function = NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - - set_directory_hook (); - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - bashline_reset_event_hook (); -} - -/* Contains the line to push into readline. */ -static char *push_to_readline = (char *)NULL; - -/* Push the contents of push_to_readline into the - readline buffer. */ -static int -bash_push_line () -{ - if (push_to_readline) - { - rl_insert_text (push_to_readline); - free (push_to_readline); - push_to_readline = (char *)NULL; - rl_startup_hook = old_rl_startup_hook; - } - return 0; -} - -/* Call this to set the initial text for the next line to read - from readline. */ -int -bash_re_edit (line) - char *line; -{ - FREE (push_to_readline); - - push_to_readline = savestring (line); - old_rl_startup_hook = rl_startup_hook; - rl_startup_hook = bash_push_line; - - return (0); -} - -static int -display_shell_version (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - rl_crlf (); - show_shell_version (0); - putc ('\r', rl_outstream); - fflush (rl_outstream); - rl_on_new_line (); - rl_redisplay (); - return 0; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Readline Stuff */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* If the user requests hostname completion, then simply build a list - of hosts, and complete from that forever more, or at least until - HOSTFILE is unset. */ - -/* THIS SHOULD BE A STRINGLIST. */ -/* The kept list of hostnames. */ -static char **hostname_list = (char **)NULL; - -/* The physical size of the above list. */ -static int hostname_list_size; - -/* The number of hostnames in the above list. */ -static int hostname_list_length; - -/* Whether or not HOSTNAME_LIST has been initialized. */ -int hostname_list_initialized = 0; - -/* Initialize the hostname completion table. */ -static void -initialize_hostname_list () -{ - char *temp; - - temp = get_string_value ("HOSTFILE"); - if (temp == 0) - temp = get_string_value ("hostname_completion_file"); - if (temp == 0) - temp = DEFAULT_HOSTS_FILE; - - snarf_hosts_from_file (temp); - - if (hostname_list) - hostname_list_initialized++; -} - -/* Add NAME to the list of hosts. */ -static void -add_host_name (name) - char *name; -{ - if (hostname_list_length + 2 > hostname_list_size) - { - hostname_list_size = (hostname_list_size + 32) - (hostname_list_size % 32); - hostname_list = strvec_resize (hostname_list, hostname_list_size); - } - - hostname_list[hostname_list_length++] = savestring (name); - hostname_list[hostname_list_length] = (char *)NULL; -} - -#define cr_whitespace(c) ((c) == '\r' || (c) == '\n' || whitespace(c)) - -static void -snarf_hosts_from_file (filename) - char *filename; -{ - FILE *file; - char *temp, buffer[256], name[256]; - register int i, start; - - file = fopen (filename, "r"); - if (file == 0) - return; - - while (temp = fgets (buffer, 255, file)) - { - /* Skip to first character. */ - for (i = 0; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]); i++) - ; - - /* If comment or blank line, ignore. */ - if (buffer[i] == '\0' || buffer[i] == '#') - continue; - - /* If `preprocessor' directive, do the include. */ - if (strncmp (buffer + i, "$include ", 9) == 0) - { - char *incfile, *t; - - /* Find start of filename. */ - for (incfile = buffer + i + 9; *incfile && whitespace (*incfile); incfile++) - ; - - /* Find end of filename. */ - for (t = incfile; *t && cr_whitespace (*t) == 0; t++) - ; - - *t = '\0'; - - snarf_hosts_from_file (incfile); - continue; - } - - /* Skip internet address if present. */ - if (DIGIT (buffer[i])) - for (; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]) == 0; i++); - - /* Gobble up names. Each name is separated with whitespace. */ - while (buffer[i]) - { - for (; cr_whitespace (buffer[i]); i++) - ; - if (buffer[i] == '\0' || buffer[i] == '#') - break; - - /* Isolate the current word. */ - for (start = i; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]) == 0; i++) - ; - if (i == start) - continue; - strncpy (name, buffer + start, i - start); - name[i - start] = '\0'; - add_host_name (name); - } - } - fclose (file); -} - -/* Return the hostname list. */ -char ** -get_hostname_list () -{ - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - initialize_hostname_list (); - return (hostname_list); -} - -void -clear_hostname_list () -{ - register int i; - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - return; - for (i = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - free (hostname_list[i]); - hostname_list_length = hostname_list_initialized = 0; -} - -/* Return a NULL terminated list of hostnames which begin with TEXT. - Initialize the hostname list the first time if neccessary. - The array is malloc ()'ed, but not the individual strings. */ -static char ** -hostnames_matching (text) - char *text; -{ - register int i, len, nmatch, rsize; - char **result; - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - initialize_hostname_list (); - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - return ((char **)NULL); - - /* Special case. If TEXT consists of nothing, then the whole list is - what is desired. */ - if (*text == '\0') - { - result = strvec_create (1 + hostname_list_length); - for (i = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - result[i] = hostname_list[i]; - result[i] = (char *)NULL; - return (result); - } - - /* Scan until found, or failure. */ - len = strlen (text); - result = (char **)NULL; - for (i = nmatch = rsize = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - { - if (STREQN (text, hostname_list[i], len) == 0) - continue; - - /* OK, it matches. Add it to the list. */ - if (nmatch >= (rsize - 1)) - { - rsize = (rsize + 16) - (rsize % 16); - result = strvec_resize (result, rsize); - } - - result[nmatch++] = hostname_list[i]; - } - if (nmatch) - result[nmatch] = (char *)NULL; - return (result); -} - -/* The equivalent of the Korn shell C-o operate-and-get-next-history-line - editing command. */ -static int saved_history_line_to_use = -1; -static int last_saved_history_line = -1; - -#define HISTORY_FULL() (history_is_stifled () && history_length >= history_max_entries) - -static int -set_saved_history () -{ - /* XXX - compensate for assumption that history was `shuffled' if it was - actually not. */ - if (HISTORY_FULL () && - hist_last_line_added == 0 && - saved_history_line_to_use < history_length - 1) - saved_history_line_to_use++; - - if (saved_history_line_to_use >= 0) - { - rl_get_previous_history (history_length - saved_history_line_to_use, 0); - last_saved_history_line = saved_history_line_to_use; - } - saved_history_line_to_use = -1; - rl_startup_hook = old_rl_startup_hook; - return (0); -} - -static int -operate_and_get_next (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - int where; - - /* Accept the current line. */ - rl_newline (1, c); - - /* Find the current line, and find the next line to use. */ - where = where_history (); - - if (HISTORY_FULL () || (where >= history_length - 1)) - saved_history_line_to_use = where; - else - saved_history_line_to_use = where + 1; - - old_rl_startup_hook = rl_startup_hook; - rl_startup_hook = set_saved_history; - - return 0; -} - -/* This vi mode command causes VI_EDIT_COMMAND to be run on the current - command being entered (if no explicit argument is given), otherwise on - a command from the history file. */ - -#define VI_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e \"${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-vi}}\"" -#define EMACS_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e \"${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-emacs}}\"" -#define POSIX_VI_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e vi" - -static int -edit_and_execute_command (count, c, editing_mode, edit_command) - int count, c, editing_mode; - char *edit_command; -{ - char *command, *metaval; - int r, rrs, metaflag; - sh_parser_state_t ps; - - rrs = rl_readline_state; - saved_command_line_count = current_command_line_count; - - /* Accept the current line. */ - rl_newline (1, c); - - if (rl_explicit_arg) - { - command = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (edit_command) + 8); - sprintf (command, "%s %d", edit_command, count); - } - else - { - /* Take the command we were just editing, add it to the history file, - then call fc to operate on it. We have to add a dummy command to - the end of the history because fc ignores the last command (assumes - it's supposed to deal with the command before the `fc'). */ - /* This breaks down when using command-oriented history and are not - finished with the command, so we should not ignore the last command */ - using_history (); - current_command_line_count++; /* for rl_newline above */ - bash_add_history (rl_line_buffer); - current_command_line_count = 0; /* for dummy history entry */ - bash_add_history (""); - history_lines_this_session++; - using_history (); - command = savestring (edit_command); - } - - metaval = rl_variable_value ("input-meta"); - metaflag = RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE (metaval); - - /* Now, POSIX.1-2001 and SUSv3 say that the commands executed from the - temporary file should be placed into the history. We don't do that - yet. */ - if (rl_deprep_term_function) - (*rl_deprep_term_function) (); - save_parser_state (&ps); - r = parse_and_execute (command, (editing_mode == VI_EDITING_MODE) ? "v" : "C-xC-e", SEVAL_NOHIST); - restore_parser_state (&ps); - if (rl_prep_term_function) - (*rl_prep_term_function) (metaflag); - - current_command_line_count = saved_command_line_count; - - /* Now erase the contents of the current line and undo the effects of the - rl_accept_line() above. We don't even want to make the text we just - executed available for undoing. */ - rl_line_buffer[0] = '\0'; /* XXX */ - rl_point = rl_end = 0; - rl_done = 0; - rl_readline_state = rrs; - - rl_forced_update_display (); - - return r; -} - -#if defined (VI_MODE) -static int -vi_edit_and_execute_command (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - if (posixly_correct) - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, VI_EDITING_MODE, POSIX_VI_EDIT_COMMAND)); - else - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, VI_EDITING_MODE, VI_EDIT_COMMAND)); -} -#endif /* VI_MODE */ - -static int -emacs_edit_and_execute_command (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, EMACS_EDITING_MODE, EMACS_EDIT_COMMAND)); -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static int -posix_edit_macros (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int c; - char alias_name[3], *alias_value, *macro; - - c = rl_read_key (); - alias_name[0] = '_'; - alias_name[1] = c; - alias_name[2] = '\0'; - - alias_value = get_alias_value (alias_name); - if (alias_value && *alias_value) - { - macro = savestring (alias_value); - rl_push_macro_input (macro); - } - return 0; -} -#endif - -/* Bindable commands that move `shell-words': that is, sequences of - non-unquoted-metacharacters. */ - -#define WORDDELIM(c) (shellmeta(c) || shellblank(c)) - -static int -bash_forward_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - size_t slen; - int sindex, c, p; - DECLARE_MBSTATE; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_backward_shellword (-count, key)); - - /* The tricky part of this is deciding whether or not the first character - we're on is an unquoted metacharacter. Not completely handled yet. */ - /* XXX - need to test this stuff with backslash-escaped shell - metacharacters and unclosed single- and double-quoted strings. */ - - p = rl_point; - slen = rl_end; - - while (count) - { - if (p == rl_end) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - return 0; - } - - /* Are we in a quoted string? If we are, move to the end of the quoted - string and continue the outer loop. We only want quoted strings, not - backslash-escaped characters, but char_is_quoted doesn't - differentiate. */ - if (char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) && p > 0 && rl_line_buffer[p-1] != '\\') - { - do - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - while (p < rl_end && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p)); - count--; - continue; - } - - /* Rest of code assumes we are not in a quoted string. */ - /* Move forward until we hit a non-metacharacter. */ - while (p < rl_end && (c = rl_line_buffer[p]) && WORDDELIM (c)) - { - switch (c) - { - default: - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - continue; /* straight back to loop, don't increment p */ - case '\\': - if (p < rl_end && rl_line_buffer[p]) - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - case '\'': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "'", SD_NOJMP); - break; - case '"': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "\"", SD_NOJMP); - break; - } - - if (p < rl_end) - p++; - } - - if (rl_line_buffer[p] == 0 || p == rl_end) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - rl_ding (); - return 0; - } - - /* Now move forward until we hit a non-quoted metacharacter or EOL */ - while (p < rl_end && (c = rl_line_buffer[p]) && WORDDELIM (c) == 0) - { - switch (c) - { - default: - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - continue; /* straight back to loop, don't increment p */ - case '\\': - if (p < rl_end && rl_line_buffer[p]) - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - case '\'': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "'", SD_NOJMP); - break; - case '"': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "\"", SD_NOJMP); - break; - } - - if (p < rl_end) - p++; - } - - if (p == rl_end || rl_line_buffer[p] == 0) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - return (0); - } - - count--; - } - - rl_point = p; - return (0); -} - -static int -bash_backward_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - size_t slen; - int sindex, c, p; - DECLARE_MBSTATE; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_forward_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - slen = rl_end; - - while (count) - { - if (p == 0) - { - rl_point = 0; - return 0; - } - - /* Move backward until we hit a non-metacharacter. */ - while (p > 0) - { - c = rl_line_buffer[p]; - if (WORDDELIM (c) && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) == 0) - BACKUP_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - } - - if (p == 0) - { - rl_point = 0; - return 0; - } - - /* Now move backward until we hit a metacharacter or BOL. */ - while (p > 0) - { - c = rl_line_buffer[p]; - if (WORDDELIM (c) && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) == 0) - break; - BACKUP_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - } - - count--; - } - - rl_point = p; - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_kill_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int p; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_backward_kill_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - bash_forward_shellword (count, key); - - if (rl_point != p) - rl_kill_text (p, rl_point); - - rl_point = p; - if (rl_editing_mode == 1) /* 1 == emacs_mode */ - rl_mark = rl_point; - - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_backward_kill_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int p; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_kill_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - bash_backward_shellword (count, key); - - if (rl_point != p) - rl_kill_text (p, rl_point); - - if (rl_editing_mode == 1) /* 1 == emacs_mode */ - rl_mark = rl_point; - - return 0; -} - - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* How To Do Shell Completion */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#define COMMAND_SEPARATORS ";|&{(`" -/* )} */ -#define COMMAND_SEPARATORS_PLUS_WS ";|&{(` \t" -/* )} */ - -/* check for redirections and other character combinations that are not - command separators */ -static int -check_redir (ti) - int ti; -{ - register int this_char, prev_char; - - /* Handle the two character tokens `>&', `<&', and `>|'. - We are not in a command position after one of these. */ - this_char = rl_line_buffer[ti]; - prev_char = rl_line_buffer[ti - 1]; - - if ((this_char == '&' && (prev_char == '<' || prev_char == '>')) || - (this_char == '|' && prev_char == '>')) - return (1); - else if (this_char == '{' && prev_char == '$') /*}*/ - return (1); -#if 0 /* Not yet */ - else if (this_char == '(' && prev_char == '$') /*)*/ - return (1); - else if (this_char == '(' && prev_char == '<') /*)*/ - return (1); -#if defined (EXTENDED_GLOB) - else if (extended_glob && this_char == '(' && prev_char == '!') /*)*/ - return (1); -#endif -#endif - else if (char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, ti)) - return (1); - return (0); -} - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -/* - * XXX - because of the <= start test, and setting os = s+1, this can - * potentially return os > start. This is probably not what we want to - * happen, but fix later after 2.05a-release. - */ -static int -find_cmd_start (start) - int start; -{ - register int s, os; - - os = 0; - /* Flags == SD_NOJMP only because we want to skip over command substitutions - in assignment statements. Have to test whether this affects `standalone' - command substitutions as individual words. */ - while (((s = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, os, COMMAND_SEPARATORS, SD_NOJMP/*|SD_NOSKIPCMD*/)) <= start) && - rl_line_buffer[s]) - os = s+1; - return os; -} - -static int -find_cmd_end (end) - int end; -{ - register int e; - - e = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, end, COMMAND_SEPARATORS, SD_NOJMP); - return e; -} - -static char * -find_cmd_name (start, sp, ep) - int start; - int *sp, *ep; -{ - char *name; - register int s, e; - - for (s = start; whitespace (rl_line_buffer[s]); s++) - ; - - /* skip until a shell break character */ - e = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, s, "()<>;&| \t\n", SD_NOJMP); - - name = substring (rl_line_buffer, s, e); - - if (sp) - *sp = s; - if (ep) - *ep = e; - - return (name); -} - -static char * -prog_complete_return (text, matchnum) - const char *text; - int matchnum; -{ - static int ind; - - if (matchnum == 0) - ind = 0; - - if (prog_complete_matches == 0 || prog_complete_matches[ind] == 0) - return (char *)NULL; - return (prog_complete_matches[ind++]); -} - -#endif /* PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION */ - -/* Do some completion on TEXT. The indices of TEXT in RL_LINE_BUFFER are - at START and END. Return an array of matches, or NULL if none. */ -static char ** -attempt_shell_completion (text, start, end) - const char *text; - int start, end; -{ - int in_command_position, ti, saveti, qc, dflags; - char **matches, *command_separator_chars; - - command_separator_chars = COMMAND_SEPARATORS; - matches = (char **)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - set_directory_hook (); - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - /* Determine if this could be a command word. It is if it appears at - the start of the line (ignoring preceding whitespace), or if it - appears after a character that separates commands. It cannot be a - command word if we aren't at the top-level prompt. */ - ti = start - 1; - saveti = qc = -1; - - while ((ti > -1) && (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[ti]))) - ti--; - -#if 1 - /* If this is an open quote, maybe we're trying to complete a quoted - command name. */ - if (ti >= 0 && (rl_line_buffer[ti] == '"' || rl_line_buffer[ti] == '\'')) - { - qc = rl_line_buffer[ti]; - saveti = ti--; - while (ti > -1 && (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[ti]))) - ti--; - } -#endif - - in_command_position = 0; - if (ti < 0) - { - /* Only do command completion at the start of a line when we - are prompting at the top level. */ - if (current_prompt_string == ps1_prompt) - in_command_position++; - else if (parser_in_command_position ()) - in_command_position++; - } - else if (member (rl_line_buffer[ti], command_separator_chars)) - { - in_command_position++; - - if (check_redir (ti) == 1) - in_command_position = 0; - } - else - { - /* This still could be in command position. It is possible - that all of the previous words on the line are variable - assignments. */ - } - - /* Check that we haven't incorrectly flagged a closed command substitution - as indicating we're in a command position. */ - if (in_command_position && ti >= 0 && rl_line_buffer[ti] == '`' && - *text != '`' && unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, end, "`") == 0) - in_command_position = 0; - - /* Special handling for command substitution. If *TEXT is a backquote, - it can be the start or end of an old-style command substitution, or - unmatched. If it's unmatched, both calls to unclosed_pair will - succeed. Don't bother if readline found a single quote and we are - completing on the substring. */ - if (*text == '`' && rl_completion_quote_character != '\'' && - (in_command_position || (unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, start, "`") && - unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, end, "`")))) - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_subst_completion_function); - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - /* Attempt programmable completion. */ - if (matches == 0 && (in_command_position == 0 || text[0] == '\0') && - prog_completion_enabled && (progcomp_size () > 0) && - current_prompt_string == ps1_prompt) - { - int s, e, s1, e1, os, foundcs; - char *n; - - /* XXX - don't free the members */ - if (prog_complete_matches) - free (prog_complete_matches); - prog_complete_matches = (char **)NULL; - - os = start; - n = 0; - s = find_cmd_start (os); - e = find_cmd_end (end); - do - { - /* Skip over assignment statements preceding a command name. If we - don't find a command name at all, we can perform command name - completion. If we find a partial command name, we should perform - command name completion on it. */ - FREE (n); - n = find_cmd_name (s, &s1, &e1); - s = e1 + 1; - } - while (assignment (n, 0)); - s = s1; /* reset to index where name begins */ - - if (start == 0 && end == 0 && e != 0 && text[0] == '\0') /* beginning of non-empty line */ - foundcs = 0; - else if (start == end && start == s1 && e != 0 && e1 > end) /* beginning of command name, leading whitespace */ - foundcs = 0; - else if (e == 0 && e == s && text[0] == '\0') /* beginning of empty line */ - prog_complete_matches = programmable_completions ("_EmptycmD_", text, s, e, &foundcs); - else if (start == end && text[0] == '\0' && s1 > start && whitespace (rl_line_buffer[start])) - foundcs = 0; /* whitespace before command name */ - else if (e > s && assignment (n, 0) == 0) - prog_complete_matches = programmable_completions (n, text, s, e, &foundcs); - else if (s >= e && n[0] == '\0' && text[0] == '\0' && start > 0) - { - foundcs = 0; /* empty command name following assignments */ - in_command_position = 1; - } - else if (s == start && e == end && STREQ (n, text) && start > 0) - { - foundcs = 0; /* partial command name following assignments */ - in_command_position = 1; - } - else - foundcs = 0; - FREE (n); - /* XXX - if we found a COMPSPEC for the command, just return whatever - the programmable completion code returns, and disable the default - filename completion that readline will do unless the COPT_DEFAULT - option has been set with the `-o default' option to complete or - compopt. */ - if (foundcs) - { - pcomp_set_readline_variables (foundcs, 1); - /* Turn what the programmable completion code returns into what - readline wants. I should have made compute_lcd_of_matches - external... */ - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, prog_complete_return); - if ((foundcs & COPT_DEFAULT) == 0) - rl_attempted_completion_over = 1; /* no default */ - if (matches || ((foundcs & COPT_BASHDEFAULT) == 0)) - return (matches); - } - } -#endif - - if (matches == 0) - { - dflags = 0; - if (in_command_position) - dflags |= DEFCOMP_CMDPOS; - matches = bash_default_completion (text, start, end, qc, dflags); - } - - return matches; -} - -char ** -bash_default_completion (text, start, end, qc, compflags) - const char *text; - int start, end, qc, compflags; -{ - char **matches, *t; - - matches = (char **)NULL; - - /* New posix-style command substitution or variable name? */ - if (!matches && *text == '$') - { - if (qc != '\'' && text[1] == '(') /* ) */ - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_subst_completion_function); - else - { - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, variable_completion_function); - if (matches && matches[0] && matches[1] == 0) - { - t = savestring (matches[0]); - bash_filename_stat_hook (&t); - /* doesn't use test_for_directory because that performs tilde - expansion */ - if (file_isdir (t)) - rl_completion_append_character = '/'; - free (t); - } - } - } - - /* If the word starts in `~', and there is no slash in the word, then - try completing this word as a username. */ - if (matches == 0 && *text == '~' && mbschr (text, '/') == 0) - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, rl_username_completion_function); - - /* Another one. Why not? If the word starts in '@', then look through - the world of known hostnames for completion first. */ - if (matches == 0 && perform_hostname_completion && *text == '@') - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, hostname_completion_function); - - /* And last, (but not least) if this word is in a command position, then - complete over possible command names, including aliases, functions, - and command names. */ - if (matches == 0 && (compflags & DEFCOMP_CMDPOS)) - { - /* If END == START and text[0] == 0, we are trying to complete an empty - command word. */ - if (no_empty_command_completion && end == start && text[0] == '\0') - { - matches = (char **)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = bash_ignore_everything; - } - else - { -#define CMD_IS_DIR(x) (absolute_pathname(x) == 0 && absolute_program(x) == 0 && *(x) != '~' && test_for_directory (x)) - - dot_in_path = 0; - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_word_completion_function); - - /* If we are attempting command completion and nothing matches, we - do not want readline to perform filename completion for us. We - still want to be able to complete partial pathnames, so set the - completion ignore function to something which will remove - filenames and leave directories in the match list. */ - if (matches == (char **)NULL) - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = bash_ignore_filenames; - else if (matches[1] == 0 && CMD_IS_DIR(matches[0]) && dot_in_path == 0) - /* If we found a single match, without looking in the current - directory (because it's not in $PATH), but the found name is - also a command in the current directory, suppress appending any - terminating character, since it's ambiguous. */ - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - else if (matches[0] && matches[1] && STREQ (matches[0], matches[1]) && CMD_IS_DIR (matches[0])) - /* There are multiple instances of the same match (duplicate - completions haven't yet been removed). In this case, all of - the matches will be the same, and the duplicate removal code - will distill them all down to one. We turn on - rl_completion_suppress_append for the same reason as above. - Remember: we only care if there's eventually a single unique - completion. If there are multiple completions this won't - make a difference and the problem won't occur. */ - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - } - } - - /* This could be a globbing pattern, so try to expand it using pathname - expansion. */ - if (!matches && glob_pattern_p (text)) - { - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, glob_complete_word); - /* A glob expression that matches more than one filename is problematic. - If we match more than one filename, punt. */ - if (matches && matches[1] && rl_completion_type == TAB) - { - strvec_dispose (matches); - matches = (char **)0; - } - else if (matches && matches[1] && rl_completion_type == '!') - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - } - - return (matches); -} - -static int -bash_command_name_stat_hook (name) - char **name; -{ - char *cname, *result; - - cname = *name; - /* XXX - we could do something here with converting aliases, builtins, - and functions into something that came out as executable, but we don't. */ - result = search_for_command (cname, 0); - if (result) - { - *name = result; - return 1; - } - return 0; -} - -static int -executable_completion (filename, searching_path) - const char *filename; - int searching_path; -{ - char *f; - int r; - - f = savestring (filename); - bash_directory_completion_hook (&f); - - r = searching_path ? executable_file (f) : executable_or_directory (f); - free (f); - return r; -} - -/* This is the function to call when the word to complete is in a position - where a command word can be found. It grovels $PATH, looking for commands - that match. It also scans aliases, function names, and the shell_builtin - table. */ -char * -command_word_completion_function (hint_text, state) - const char *hint_text; - int state; -{ - static char *hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *path = (char *)NULL; - static char *val = (char *)NULL; - static char *filename_hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *dequoted_hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *directory_part = (char *)NULL; - static char **glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - static int path_index, hint_len, dequoted_len, istate, igncase; - static int mapping_over, local_index, searching_path, hint_is_dir; - static int old_glob_ignore_case, globpat; - static SHELL_VAR **varlist = (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; -#if defined (ALIAS) - static alias_t **alias_list = (alias_t **)NULL; -#endif /* ALIAS */ - char *temp, *cval; - - /* We have to map over the possibilities for command words. If we have - no state, then make one just for that purpose. */ - if (state == 0) - { - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_command_name_stat_hook; - - if (dequoted_hint && dequoted_hint != hint) - free (dequoted_hint); - if (hint) - free (hint); - - mapping_over = searching_path = 0; - hint_is_dir = CMD_IS_DIR (hint_text); - val = (char *)NULL; - - temp = rl_variable_value ("completion-ignore-case"); - igncase = RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE (temp); - - if (glob_matches) - { - free (glob_matches); - glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - } - - globpat = glob_pattern_p (hint_text); - - /* If this is an absolute program name, do not check it against - aliases, reserved words, functions or builtins. We must check - whether or not it is unique, and, if so, whether that filename - is executable. */ - if (globpat || absolute_program (hint_text)) - { - /* Perform tilde expansion on what's passed, so we don't end up - passing filenames with tildes directly to stat(). */ - if (*hint_text == '~') - { - hint = bash_tilde_expand (hint_text, 0); - directory_part = savestring (hint_text); - temp = strchr (directory_part, '/'); - if (temp) - *temp = 0; - else - { - free (directory_part); - directory_part = (char *)NULL; - } - } - else - hint = savestring (hint_text); - - dequoted_hint = hint; - /* If readline's completer found a quote character somewhere, but - didn't set the quote character, there must have been a quote - character embedded in the filename. It can't be at the start of - the filename, so we need to dequote the filename before we look - in the file system for it. */ - if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_completion_quote_character == 0) - { - dequoted_hint = bash_dequote_filename (hint, 0); - free (hint); - hint = dequoted_hint; - } - dequoted_len = hint_len = strlen (hint); - - if (filename_hint) - free (filename_hint); - - filename_hint = savestring (hint); - - istate = 0; - - if (globpat) - { - mapping_over = 5; - goto globword; - } - else - { - if (dircomplete_expand && path_dot_or_dotdot (filename_hint)) - { - dircomplete_expand = 0; - set_directory_hook (); - dircomplete_expand = 1; - } - mapping_over = 4; - goto inner; - } - } - - dequoted_hint = hint = savestring (hint_text); - dequoted_len = hint_len = strlen (hint); - - if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_completion_quote_character == 0) - { - dequoted_hint = bash_dequote_filename (hint, 0); - dequoted_len = strlen (dequoted_hint); - } - - path = get_string_value ("PATH"); - path_index = dot_in_path = 0; - - /* Initialize the variables for each type of command word. */ - local_index = 0; - - if (varlist) - free (varlist); - - varlist = all_visible_functions (); - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (alias_list) - free (alias_list); - - alias_list = all_aliases (); -#endif /* ALIAS */ - } - - /* mapping_over says what we are currently hacking. Note that every case - in this list must fall through when there are no more possibilities. */ - - switch (mapping_over) - { - case 0: /* Aliases come first. */ -#if defined (ALIAS) - while (alias_list && alias_list[local_index]) - { - register char *alias; - - alias = alias_list[local_index++]->name; - - if (STREQN (alias, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (alias)); - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - - case 1: /* Then shell reserved words. */ - { - while (word_token_alist[local_index].word) - { - register char *reserved_word; - - reserved_word = word_token_alist[local_index++].word; - - if (STREQN (reserved_word, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (reserved_word)); - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - } - - case 2: /* Then function names. */ - while (varlist && varlist[local_index]) - { - register char *varname; - - varname = varlist[local_index++]->name; - - if (STREQN (varname, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (varname)); - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - - case 3: /* Then shell builtins. */ - for (; local_index < num_shell_builtins; local_index++) - { - /* Ignore it if it doesn't have a function pointer or if it - is not currently enabled. */ - if (!shell_builtins[local_index].function || - (shell_builtins[local_index].flags & BUILTIN_ENABLED) == 0) - continue; - - if (STREQN (shell_builtins[local_index].name, hint, hint_len)) - { - int i = local_index++; - - return (savestring (shell_builtins[i].name)); - } - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - } - -globword: - /* Limited support for completing command words with globbing chars. Only - a single match (multiple matches that end up reducing the number of - characters in the common prefix are bad) will ever be returned on - regular completion. */ - if (globpat) - { - if (state == 0) - { - glob_ignore_case = igncase; - glob_matches = shell_glob_filename (hint); - glob_ignore_case = old_glob_ignore_case; - - if (GLOB_FAILED (glob_matches) || glob_matches == 0) - { - glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - local_index = 0; - - if (glob_matches[1] && rl_completion_type == TAB) /* multiple matches are bad */ - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - while (val = glob_matches[local_index++]) - { - if (executable_or_directory (val)) - { - if (*hint_text == '~' && directory_part) - { - temp = restore_tilde (val, directory_part); - free (val); - val = temp; - } - return (val); - } - free (val); - } - - glob_ignore_case = old_glob_ignore_case; - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - /* If the text passed is a directory in the current directory, return it - as a possible match. Executables in directories in the current - directory can be specified using relative pathnames and successfully - executed even when `.' is not in $PATH. */ - if (hint_is_dir) - { - hint_is_dir = 0; /* only return the hint text once */ - return (savestring (hint_text)); - } - - /* Repeatedly call filename_completion_function while we have - members of PATH left. Question: should we stat each file? - Answer: we call executable_file () on each file. */ - outer: - - istate = (val != (char *)NULL); - - if (istate == 0) - { - char *current_path; - - /* Get the next directory from the path. If there is none, then we - are all done. */ - if (path == 0 || path[path_index] == 0 || - (current_path = extract_colon_unit (path, &path_index)) == 0) - return ((char *)NULL); - - searching_path = 1; - if (*current_path == 0) - { - free (current_path); - current_path = savestring ("."); - } - - if (*current_path == '~') - { - char *t; - - t = bash_tilde_expand (current_path, 0); - free (current_path); - current_path = t; - } - - if (current_path[0] == '.' && current_path[1] == '\0') - dot_in_path = 1; - - if (filename_hint) - free (filename_hint); - - filename_hint = sh_makepath (current_path, hint, 0); - free (current_path); /* XXX */ - } - - inner: - val = rl_filename_completion_function (filename_hint, istate); - if (mapping_over == 4 && dircomplete_expand) - set_directory_hook (); - - istate = 1; - - if (val == 0) - { - /* If the hint text is an absolute program, then don't bother - searching through PATH. */ - if (absolute_program (hint)) - return ((char *)NULL); - - goto outer; - } - else - { - int match, freetemp; - - if (absolute_program (hint)) - { - if (igncase == 0) - match = strncmp (val, hint, hint_len) == 0; - else - match = strncasecmp (val, hint, hint_len) == 0; - - /* If we performed tilde expansion, restore the original - filename. */ - if (*hint_text == '~') - temp = restore_tilde (val, directory_part); - else - temp = savestring (val); - freetemp = 1; - } - else - { - temp = strrchr (val, '/'); - - if (temp) - { - temp++; - if (igncase == 0) - freetemp = match = strncmp (temp, hint, hint_len) == 0; - else - freetemp = match = strncasecmp (temp, hint, hint_len) == 0; - if (match) - temp = savestring (temp); - } - else - freetemp = match = 0; - } - - /* If we have found a match, and it is an executable file, return it. - We don't return directory names when searching $PATH, since the - bash execution code won't find executables in directories which - appear in directories in $PATH when they're specified using - relative pathnames. */ -#if 0 - /* If we're not searching $PATH and we have a relative pathname, we - need to re-canonicalize it before testing whether or not it's an - executable or a directory so the shell treats .. relative to $PWD - according to the physical/logical option. The shell already - canonicalizes the directory name in order to tell readline where - to look, so not doing it here will be inconsistent. */ - /* XXX -- currently not used -- will introduce more inconsistency, - since shell does not canonicalize ../foo before passing it to - shell_execve(). */ - if (match && searching_path == 0 && *val == '.') - { - char *t, *t1; - - t = get_working_directory ("command-word-completion"); - t1 = make_absolute (val, t); - free (t); - cval = sh_canonpath (t1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - } - else -#endif - cval = val; - - if (match && executable_completion ((searching_path ? val : cval), searching_path)) - { - if (cval != val) - free (cval); - free (val); - val = ""; /* So it won't be NULL. */ - return (temp); - } - else - { - if (freetemp) - free (temp); - if (cval != val) - free (cval); - free (val); - goto inner; - } - } -} - -/* Completion inside an unterminated command substitution. */ -static char * -command_subst_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **matches = (char **)NULL; - static const char *orig_start; - static char *filename_text = (char *)NULL; - static int cmd_index, start_len; - char *value; - - if (state == 0) - { - if (filename_text) - free (filename_text); - orig_start = text; - if (*text == '`') - text++; - else if (*text == '$' && text[1] == '(') /* ) */ - text += 2; - /* If the text was quoted, suppress any quote character that the - readline completion code would insert. */ - rl_completion_suppress_quote = 1; - start_len = text - orig_start; - filename_text = savestring (text); - if (matches) - free (matches); - - /* - * At this point we can entertain the idea of re-parsing - * `filename_text' into a (possibly incomplete) command name and - * arguments, and doing completion based on that. This is - * currently very rudimentary, but it is a small improvement. - */ - for (value = filename_text + strlen (filename_text) - 1; value > filename_text; value--) - if (whitespace (*value) || member (*value, COMMAND_SEPARATORS)) - break; - if (value <= filename_text) - matches = rl_completion_matches (filename_text, command_word_completion_function); - else - { - value++; - start_len += value - filename_text; - if (whitespace (value[-1])) - matches = rl_completion_matches (value, rl_filename_completion_function); - else - matches = rl_completion_matches (value, command_word_completion_function); - } - - /* If there is more than one match, rl_completion_matches has already - put the lcd in matches[0]. Skip over it. */ - cmd_index = matches && matches[0] && matches[1]; - - /* If there's a single match and it's a directory, set the append char - to the expected `/'. Otherwise, don't append anything. */ - if (matches && matches[0] && matches[1] == 0 && test_for_directory (matches[0])) - rl_completion_append_character = '/'; - else - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - } - - if (matches == 0 || matches[cmd_index] == 0) - { - rl_filename_quoting_desired = 0; /* disable quoting */ - return ((char *)NULL); - } - else - { - value = (char *)xmalloc (1 + start_len + strlen (matches[cmd_index])); - - if (start_len == 1) - value[0] = *orig_start; - else - strncpy (value, orig_start, start_len); - - strcpy (value + start_len, matches[cmd_index]); - - cmd_index++; - return (value); - } -} - -/* Okay, now we write the entry_function for variable completion. */ -static char * -variable_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **varlist = (char **)NULL; - static int varlist_index; - static char *varname = (char *)NULL; - static int namelen; - static int first_char, first_char_loc; - - if (!state) - { - if (varname) - free (varname); - - first_char_loc = 0; - first_char = text[0]; - - if (first_char == '$') - first_char_loc++; - - if (text[first_char_loc] == '{') - first_char_loc++; - - varname = savestring (text + first_char_loc); - - namelen = strlen (varname); - if (varlist) - strvec_dispose (varlist); - - varlist = all_variables_matching_prefix (varname); - varlist_index = 0; - } - - if (!varlist || !varlist[varlist_index]) - { - return ((char *)NULL); - } - else - { - char *value; - - value = (char *)xmalloc (4 + strlen (varlist[varlist_index])); - - if (first_char_loc) - { - value[0] = first_char; - if (first_char_loc == 2) - value[1] = '{'; - } - - strcpy (value + first_char_loc, varlist[varlist_index]); - if (first_char_loc == 2) - strcat (value, "}"); - - varlist_index++; - return (value); - } -} - -/* How about a completion function for hostnames? */ -static char * -hostname_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **list = (char **)NULL; - static int list_index = 0; - static int first_char, first_char_loc; - - /* If we don't have any state, make some. */ - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (list); - - list = (char **)NULL; - - first_char_loc = 0; - first_char = *text; - - if (first_char == '@') - first_char_loc++; - - list = hostnames_matching ((char *)text+first_char_loc); - list_index = 0; - } - - if (list && list[list_index]) - { - char *t; - - t = (char *)xmalloc (2 + strlen (list[list_index])); - *t = first_char; - strcpy (t + first_char_loc, list[list_index]); - list_index++; - return (t); - } - - return ((char *)NULL); -} - -/* - * A completion function for service names from /etc/services (or wherever). - */ -char * -bash_servicename_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ -#if defined (__WIN32__) || defined (__OPENNT) || !defined (HAVE_GETSERVENT) - return ((char *)NULL); -#else - static char *sname = (char *)NULL; - static struct servent *srvent; - static int snamelen, firstc; - char *value; - char **alist, *aentry; - int afound; - - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (sname); - firstc = *text; - - sname = savestring (text); - snamelen = strlen (sname); - setservent (0); - } - - while (srvent = getservent ()) - { - afound = 0; - if (snamelen == 0 || (STREQN (sname, srvent->s_name, snamelen))) - break; - /* Not primary, check aliases */ - for (alist = srvent->s_aliases; *alist; alist++) - { - aentry = *alist; - if (STREQN (sname, aentry, snamelen)) - { - afound = 1; - break; - } - } - - if (afound) - break; - } - - if (srvent == 0) - { - endservent (); - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - value = afound ? savestring (aentry) : savestring (srvent->s_name); - return value; -#endif -} - -/* - * A completion function for group names from /etc/group (or wherever). - */ -char * -bash_groupname_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ -#if defined (__WIN32__) || defined (__OPENNT) || !defined (HAVE_GRP_H) - return ((char *)NULL); -#else - static char *gname = (char *)NULL; - static struct group *grent; - static int gnamelen; - char *value; - - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (gname); - gname = savestring (text); - gnamelen = strlen (gname); - - setgrent (); - } - - while (grent = getgrent ()) - { - if (gnamelen == 0 || (STREQN (gname, grent->gr_name, gnamelen))) - break; - } - - if (grent == 0) - { - endgrent (); - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - value = savestring (grent->gr_name); - return (value); -#endif -} - -/* Functions to perform history and alias expansions on the current line. */ - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* Perform history expansion on the current line. If no history expansion - is done, pre_process_line() returns what it was passed, so we need to - allocate a new line here. */ -static char * -history_expand_line_internal (line) - char *line; -{ - char *new_line; - int old_verify; - - old_verify = hist_verify; - hist_verify = 0; - new_line = pre_process_line (line, 0, 0); - hist_verify = old_verify; - - return (new_line == line) ? savestring (line) : new_line; -} -#endif - -/* There was an error in expansion. Let the preprocessor print - the error here. */ -static void -cleanup_expansion_error () -{ - char *to_free; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - int old_verify; - - old_verify = hist_verify; - hist_verify = 0; -#endif - - fprintf (rl_outstream, "\r\n"); - to_free = pre_process_line (rl_line_buffer, 1, 0); -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - hist_verify = old_verify; -#endif - if (to_free != rl_line_buffer) - FREE (to_free); - putc ('\r', rl_outstream); - rl_forced_update_display (); -} - -/* If NEW_LINE differs from what is in the readline line buffer, add an - undo record to get from the readline line buffer contents to the new - line and make NEW_LINE the current readline line. */ -static void -maybe_make_readline_line (new_line) - char *new_line; -{ - if (strcmp (new_line, rl_line_buffer) != 0) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - - rl_add_undo (UNDO_BEGIN, 0, 0, 0); - rl_delete_text (0, rl_point); - rl_point = rl_end = rl_mark = 0; - rl_insert_text (new_line); - rl_add_undo (UNDO_END, 0, 0, 0); - } -} - -/* Make NEW_LINE be the current readline line. This frees NEW_LINE. */ -static void -set_up_new_line (new_line) - char *new_line; -{ - int old_point, at_end; - - old_point = rl_point; - at_end = rl_point == rl_end; - - /* If the line was history and alias expanded, then make that - be one thing to undo. */ - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* Place rl_point where we think it should go. */ - if (at_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (old_point < rl_end) - { - rl_point = old_point; - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point])) - rl_forward_word (1, 0); - } -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -/* Expand aliases in the current readline line. */ -static int -alias_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = alias_expand (rl_line_buffer); - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} -#endif - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* History expand the line. */ -static int -history_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} - -/* Expand history substitutions in the current line and then insert a - space (hopefully close to where we were before). */ -static int -tcsh_magic_space (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - int dist_from_end, old_point; - - old_point = rl_point; - dist_from_end = rl_end - rl_point; - if (history_expand_line (count, ignore) == 0) - { - /* Try a simple heuristic from Stephen Gildea . - This works if all expansions were before rl_point or if no expansions - were performed. */ - rl_point = (old_point == 0) ? old_point : rl_end - dist_from_end; - rl_insert (1, ' '); - return (0); - } - else - return (1); -} -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ - -/* History and alias expand the line. */ -static int -history_and_alias_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = 0; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); -#endif - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (new_line) - { - char *alias_line; - - alias_line = alias_expand (new_line); - free (new_line); - new_line = alias_line; - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} - -/* History and alias expand the line, then perform the shell word - expansions by calling expand_string. This can't use set_up_new_line() - because we want the variable expansions as a separate undo'able - set of operations. */ -static int -shell_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - WORD_LIST *expanded_string; - - new_line = 0; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); -#endif - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (new_line) - { - char *alias_line; - - alias_line = alias_expand (new_line); - free (new_line); - new_line = alias_line; - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - - if (new_line) - { - int old_point = rl_point; - int at_end = rl_point == rl_end; - - /* If the line was history and alias expanded, then make that - be one thing to undo. */ - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* If there is variable expansion to perform, do that as a separate - operation to be undone. */ - new_line = savestring (rl_line_buffer); - expanded_string = expand_string (new_line, 0); - FREE (new_line); - if (expanded_string == 0) - { - new_line = (char *)xmalloc (1); - new_line[0] = '\0'; - } - else - { - new_line = string_list (expanded_string); - dispose_words (expanded_string); - } - - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* Place rl_point where we think it should go. */ - if (at_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (old_point < rl_end) - { - rl_point = old_point; - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point])) - rl_forward_word (1, 0); - } - return 0; - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return 1; - } -} - -/* If FIGNORE is set, then don't match files with the given suffixes when - completing filenames. If only one of the possibilities has an acceptable - suffix, delete the others, else just return and let the completer - signal an error. It is called by the completer when real - completions are done on filenames by the completer's internal - function, not for completion lists (M-?) and not on "other" - completion types, such as hostnames or commands. */ - -static struct ignorevar fignore = -{ - "FIGNORE", - (struct ign *)0, - 0, - (char *)0, - (sh_iv_item_func_t *) 0, -}; - -static void -_ignore_completion_names (names, name_func) - char **names; - sh_ignore_func_t *name_func; -{ - char **newnames; - int idx, nidx; - char **oldnames; - int oidx; - - /* If there is only one completion, see if it is acceptable. If it is - not, free it up. In any case, short-circuit and return. This is a - special case because names[0] is not the prefix of the list of names - if there is only one completion; it is the completion itself. */ - if (names[1] == (char *)0) - { - if (force_fignore) - if ((*name_func) (names[0]) == 0) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = (char *)NULL; - } - - return; - } - - /* Allocate space for array to hold list of pointers to matching - filenames. The pointers are copied back to NAMES when done. */ - for (nidx = 1; names[nidx]; nidx++) - ; - newnames = strvec_create (nidx + 1); - - if (force_fignore == 0) - { - oldnames = strvec_create (nidx - 1); - oidx = 0; - } - - newnames[0] = names[0]; - for (idx = nidx = 1; names[idx]; idx++) - { - if ((*name_func) (names[idx])) - newnames[nidx++] = names[idx]; - else if (force_fignore == 0) - oldnames[oidx++] = names[idx]; - else - free (names[idx]); - } - - newnames[nidx] = (char *)NULL; - - /* If none are acceptable then let the completer handle it. */ - if (nidx == 1) - { - if (force_fignore) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = (char *)NULL; - } - else - free (oldnames); - - free (newnames); - return; - } - - if (force_fignore == 0) - { - while (oidx) - free (oldnames[--oidx]); - free (oldnames); - } - - /* If only one is acceptable, copy it to names[0] and return. */ - if (nidx == 2) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = newnames[1]; - names[1] = (char *)NULL; - free (newnames); - return; - } - - /* Copy the acceptable names back to NAMES, set the new array end, - and return. */ - for (nidx = 1; newnames[nidx]; nidx++) - names[nidx] = newnames[nidx]; - names[nidx] = (char *)NULL; - free (newnames); -} - -static int -name_is_acceptable (name) - const char *name; -{ - struct ign *p; - int nlen; - - for (nlen = strlen (name), p = fignore.ignores; p->val; p++) - { - if (nlen > p->len && p->len > 0 && STREQ (p->val, &name[nlen - p->len])) - return (0); - } - - return (1); -} - -#if 0 -static int -ignore_dot_names (name) - char *name; -{ - return (name[0] != '.'); -} -#endif - -static int -filename_completion_ignore (names) - char **names; -{ -#if 0 - if (glob_dot_filenames == 0) - _ignore_completion_names (names, ignore_dot_names); -#endif - - setup_ignore_patterns (&fignore); - - if (fignore.num_ignores == 0) - return 0; - - _ignore_completion_names (names, name_is_acceptable); - - return 0; -} - -/* Return 1 if NAME is a directory. NAME undergoes tilde expansion. */ -static int -test_for_directory (name) - const char *name; -{ - char *fn; - int r; - - fn = bash_tilde_expand (name, 0); - r = file_isdir (fn); - free (fn); - - return (r); -} - -/* Remove files from NAMES, leaving directories. */ -static int -bash_ignore_filenames (names) - char **names; -{ - _ignore_completion_names (names, test_for_directory); - return 0; -} - -static int -return_zero (name) - const char *name; -{ - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_ignore_everything (names) - char **names; -{ - _ignore_completion_names (names, return_zero); - return 0; -} - -/* Replace a tilde-prefix in VAL with a `~', assuming the user typed it. VAL - is an expanded filename. DIRECTORY_PART is the tilde-prefix portion - of the un-tilde-expanded version of VAL (what the user typed). */ -static char * -restore_tilde (val, directory_part) - char *val, *directory_part; -{ - int l, vl, dl2, xl; - char *dh2, *expdir, *ret; - - vl = strlen (val); - - /* We need to duplicate the expansions readline performs on the directory - portion before passing it to our completion function. */ - dh2 = directory_part ? bash_dequote_filename (directory_part, 0) : 0; - bash_directory_expansion (&dh2); - dl2 = strlen (dh2); - - expdir = bash_tilde_expand (directory_part, 0); - xl = strlen (expdir); - free (expdir); - - /* - dh2 = unexpanded but dequoted tilde-prefix - dl2 = length of tilde-prefix - expdir = tilde-expanded tilde-prefix - xl = length of expanded tilde-prefix - l = length of remainder after tilde-prefix - */ - l = (vl - xl) + 1; - - ret = (char *)xmalloc (dl2 + 2 + l); - strcpy (ret, dh2); - strcpy (ret + dl2, val + xl); - - free (dh2); - return (ret); -} - -/* Simulate the expansions that will be performed by - rl_filename_completion_function. This must be called with the address of - a pointer to malloc'd memory. */ -static void -bash_directory_expansion (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *d, *nd; - - d = savestring (*dirname); - - if ((rl_directory_rewrite_hook) && (*rl_directory_rewrite_hook) (&d)) - { - free (*dirname); - *dirname = d; - } - else if (rl_directory_completion_hook && (*rl_directory_completion_hook) (&d)) - { - free (*dirname); - *dirname = d; - } - else if (rl_completion_found_quote) - { - nd = bash_dequote_filename (d, rl_completion_quote_character); - free (*dirname); - free (d); - *dirname = nd; - } -} - -/* If necessary, rewrite directory entry */ -static char * -bash_filename_rewrite_hook (fname, fnlen) - char *fname; - int fnlen; -{ - char *conv; - - conv = fnx_fromfs (fname, fnlen); - if (conv != fname) - conv = savestring (conv); - return conv; -} - -/* Functions to save and restore the appropriate directory hook */ -/* This is not static so the shopt code can call it */ -void -set_directory_hook () -{ - if (dircomplete_expand) - { - rl_directory_completion_hook = bash_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)0; - } - else - { - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = bash_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_completion_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)0; - } -} - -static rl_icppfunc_t * -save_directory_hook () -{ - rl_icppfunc_t *ret; - - if (dircomplete_expand) - { - ret = rl_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_completion_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL; - } - else - { - ret = rl_directory_rewrite_hook; - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL; - } - - return ret; -} - -static void -restore_directory_hook (hookf) - rl_icppfunc_t *hookf; -{ - if (dircomplete_expand) - rl_directory_completion_hook = hookf; - else - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = hookf; -} - -/* Expand a filename before the readline completion code passes it to stat(2). - The filename will already have had tilde expansion performed. */ -static int -bash_filename_stat_hook (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *local_dirname, *new_dirname, *t; - int should_expand_dirname, return_value; - WORD_LIST *wl; - struct stat sb; - - local_dirname = *dirname; - should_expand_dirname = return_value = 0; - if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '$')) - should_expand_dirname = '$'; - else if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '`')) /* XXX */ - should_expand_dirname = '`'; - -#if defined (HAVE_LSTAT) - if (should_expand_dirname && lstat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#else - if (should_expand_dirname && stat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#endif - should_expand_dirname = 0; - - if (should_expand_dirname) - { - new_dirname = savestring (local_dirname); - wl = expand_prompt_string (new_dirname, 0, W_NOCOMSUB); /* does the right thing */ - if (wl) - { - free (new_dirname); - new_dirname = string_list (wl); - /* Tell the completer we actually expanded something and change - *dirname only if we expanded to something non-null -- stat - behaves unpredictably when passed null or empty strings */ - if (new_dirname && *new_dirname) - { - free (local_dirname); /* XXX */ - local_dirname = *dirname = new_dirname; - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, *dirname) == 0; - } - else - free (new_dirname); - dispose_words (wl); - } - else - free (new_dirname); - } - - /* This is very similar to the code in bash_directory_completion_hook below, - but without spelling correction and not worrying about whether or not - we change relative pathnames. */ - if (no_symbolic_links == 0 && (local_dirname[0] != '.' || local_dirname[1])) - { - char *temp1, *temp2; - - t = get_working_directory ("symlink-hook"); - temp1 = make_absolute (local_dirname, t); - free (t); - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - - /* If we can't canonicalize, bail. */ - if (temp2 == 0) - { - free (temp1); - return return_value; - } - - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = temp2; - free (temp1); - } - - return (return_value); -} - -/* Handle symbolic link references and other directory name - expansions while hacking completion. This should return 1 if it modifies - the DIRNAME argument, 0 otherwise. It should make sure not to modify - DIRNAME if it returns 0. */ -static int -bash_directory_completion_hook (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *local_dirname, *new_dirname, *t; - int return_value, should_expand_dirname, nextch, closer; - WORD_LIST *wl; - struct stat sb; - - return_value = should_expand_dirname = nextch = closer = 0; - local_dirname = *dirname; - - if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '$')) - { - should_expand_dirname = '$'; - nextch = t[1]; - /* Deliberately does not handle the deprecated $[...] arithmetic - expansion syntax */ - if (nextch == '(') - closer = ')'; - else if (nextch == '{') - closer = '}'; - else - nextch = 0; - } - else if (local_dirname[0] == '~') - should_expand_dirname = '~'; - else - { - t = mbschr (local_dirname, '`'); - if (t && unclosed_pair (local_dirname, strlen (local_dirname), "`") == 0) - should_expand_dirname = '`'; - } - -#if defined (HAVE_LSTAT) - if (should_expand_dirname && lstat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#else - if (should_expand_dirname && stat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#endif - should_expand_dirname = 0; - - if (should_expand_dirname) - { - new_dirname = savestring (local_dirname); - wl = expand_prompt_string (new_dirname, 0, W_NOCOMSUB); /* does the right thing */ - if (wl) - { - *dirname = string_list (wl); - /* Tell the completer to replace the directory name only if we - actually expanded something. */ - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, *dirname) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - free (new_dirname); - dispose_words (wl); - local_dirname = *dirname; - /* XXX - change rl_filename_quote_characters here based on - should_expand_dirname/nextch/closer. This is the only place - custom_filename_quote_characters is modified. */ - if (rl_filename_quote_characters && *rl_filename_quote_characters) - { - int i, j, c; - i = strlen (default_filename_quote_characters); - custom_filename_quote_characters = xrealloc (custom_filename_quote_characters, i+1); - for (i = j = 0; c = default_filename_quote_characters[i]; i++) - { - if (c == should_expand_dirname || c == nextch || c == closer) - continue; - custom_filename_quote_characters[j++] = c; - } - custom_filename_quote_characters[j] = '\0'; - rl_filename_quote_characters = custom_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - } - } - else - { - free (new_dirname); - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = (char *)xmalloc (1); - **dirname = '\0'; - return 1; - } - } - else - { - /* Dequote the filename even if we don't expand it. */ - new_dirname = bash_dequote_filename (local_dirname, rl_completion_quote_character); - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, new_dirname) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - local_dirname = *dirname = new_dirname; - } - - /* no_symbolic_links == 0 -> use (default) logical view of the file system. - local_dirname[0] == '.' && local_dirname[1] == '/' means files in the - current directory (./). - local_dirname[0] == '.' && local_dirname[1] == 0 means relative pathnames - in the current directory (e.g., lib/sh). - XXX - should we do spelling correction on these? */ - - /* This is test as it was in bash-4.2: skip relative pathnames in current - directory. Change test to - (local_dirname[0] != '.' || (local_dirname[1] && local_dirname[1] != '/')) - if we want to skip paths beginning with ./ also. */ - if (no_symbolic_links == 0 && (local_dirname[0] != '.' || local_dirname[1])) - { - char *temp1, *temp2; - int len1, len2; - - /* If we have a relative path - (local_dirname[0] != '/' && local_dirname[0] != '.') - that is canonical after appending it to the current directory, then - temp1 = temp2+'/' - That is, - strcmp (temp1, temp2) == 0 - after adding a slash to temp2 below. It should be safe to not - change those. - */ - t = get_working_directory ("symlink-hook"); - temp1 = make_absolute (local_dirname, t); - free (t); - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - - /* Try spelling correction if initial canonicalization fails. Make - sure we are set to replace the directory name with the results so - subsequent directory checks don't fail. */ - if (temp2 == 0 && dircomplete_spelling && dircomplete_expand) - { - temp2 = dirspell (temp1); - if (temp2) - { - free (temp1); - temp1 = temp2; - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - return_value |= temp2 != 0; - } - } - /* If we can't canonicalize, bail. */ - if (temp2 == 0) - { - free (temp1); - return return_value; - } - len1 = strlen (temp1); - if (temp1[len1 - 1] == '/') - { - len2 = strlen (temp2); - if (len2 > 2) /* don't append `/' to `/' or `//' */ - { - temp2 = (char *)xrealloc (temp2, len2 + 2); - temp2[len2] = '/'; - temp2[len2 + 1] = '\0'; - } - } - - /* dircomplete_expand_relpath == 0 means we want to leave relative - pathnames that are unchanged by canonicalization alone. - *local_dirname != '/' && *local_dirname != '.' == relative pathname - (consistent with general.c:absolute_pathname()) - temp1 == temp2 (after appending a slash to temp2) means the pathname - is not changed by canonicalization as described above. */ - if (dircomplete_expand_relpath || ((local_dirname[0] != '/' && local_dirname[0] != '.') && STREQ (temp1, temp2) == 0)) - return_value |= STREQ (local_dirname, temp2) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = temp2; - free (temp1); - } - - return (return_value); -} - -static char **history_completion_array = (char **)NULL; -static int harry_size; -static int harry_len; - -static void -build_history_completion_array () -{ - register int i, j; - HIST_ENTRY **hlist; - char **tokens; - - /* First, clear out the current dynamic history completion list. */ - if (harry_size) - { - strvec_dispose (history_completion_array); - history_completion_array = (char **)NULL; - harry_size = 0; - harry_len = 0; - } - - /* Next, grovel each line of history, making each shell-sized token - a separate entry in the history_completion_array. */ - hlist = history_list (); - - if (hlist) - { - for (i = 0; hlist[i]; i++) - ; - for ( --i; i >= 0; i--) - { - /* Separate each token, and place into an array. */ - tokens = history_tokenize (hlist[i]->line); - - for (j = 0; tokens && tokens[j]; j++) - { - if (harry_len + 2 > harry_size) - history_completion_array = strvec_resize (history_completion_array, harry_size += 10); - - history_completion_array[harry_len++] = tokens[j]; - history_completion_array[harry_len] = (char *)NULL; - } - free (tokens); - } - - /* Sort the complete list of tokens. */ - if (dabbrev_expand_active == 0) - qsort (history_completion_array, harry_len, sizeof (char *), (QSFUNC *)strvec_strcmp); - } -} - -static char * -history_completion_generator (hint_text, state) - const char *hint_text; - int state; -{ - static int local_index, len; - static const char *text; - - /* If this is the first call to the generator, then initialize the - list of strings to complete over. */ - if (state == 0) - { - if (dabbrev_expand_active) /* This is kind of messy */ - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - local_index = 0; - build_history_completion_array (); - text = hint_text; - len = strlen (text); - } - - while (history_completion_array && history_completion_array[local_index]) - { - if (strncmp (text, history_completion_array[local_index++], len) == 0) - return (savestring (history_completion_array[local_index - 1])); - } - return ((char *)NULL); -} - -static int -dynamic_complete_history (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r; - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - - rl_completion_entry_function = history_completion_generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - /* XXX - use rl_completion_mode here? */ - if (rl_last_func == dynamic_complete_history) - r = rl_complete_internal ('?'); - else - r = rl_complete_internal (TAB); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - return r; -} - -static int -bash_dabbrev_expand (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r, orig_suppress, orig_sort; - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - - orig_func = rl_menu_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - orig_suppress = rl_completion_suppress_append; - orig_sort = rl_sort_completion_matches; - - rl_menu_completion_entry_function = history_completion_generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_sort_completion_matches = 0; - - /* XXX - use rl_completion_mode here? */ - dabbrev_expand_active = 1; - if (rl_last_func == bash_dabbrev_expand) - rl_last_func = rl_menu_complete; - r = rl_menu_complete (count, key); - dabbrev_expand_active = 0; - - rl_last_func = bash_dabbrev_expand; - rl_menu_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - rl_completion_suppress_append = orig_suppress; - rl_sort_completion_matches = orig_sort; - - return r; -} - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) -static int -bash_complete_username (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_username_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_username)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_username_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_username_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_username_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, rl_username_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_filename (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_filename_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_filename)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_filename_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_filename_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_filename_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_icppfunc_t *orig_dir_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - /*const*/ char *orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters; - int r; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters = rl_completer_word_break_characters; - - orig_dir_func = save_directory_hook (); - - rl_completion_entry_function = rl_filename_completion_function; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_completer_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"\'"; - - r = rl_complete_internal (what_to_do); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - rl_completer_word_break_characters = orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters; - - restore_directory_hook (orig_dir_func); - - return r; -} - -static int -bash_complete_hostname (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_hostname_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_hostname)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_hostname_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_hostname_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_variable (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_variable_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_variable)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_variable_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_variable_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_command (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_command_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_command)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_command_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_command_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_hostname_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, hostname_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_variable_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, variable_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_command_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, command_word_completion_function); -} - -static char *globtext; -static char *globorig; - -static char * -glob_complete_word (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **matches = (char **)NULL; - static int ind; - int glen; - char *ret, *ttext; - - if (state == 0) - { - rl_filename_completion_desired = 1; - FREE (matches); - if (globorig != globtext) - FREE (globorig); - FREE (globtext); - - ttext = bash_tilde_expand (text, 0); - - if (rl_explicit_arg) - { - globorig = savestring (ttext); - glen = strlen (ttext); - globtext = (char *)xmalloc (glen + 2); - strcpy (globtext, ttext); - globtext[glen] = '*'; - globtext[glen+1] = '\0'; - } - else - globtext = globorig = savestring (ttext); - - if (ttext != text) - free (ttext); - - matches = shell_glob_filename (globtext); - if (GLOB_FAILED (matches)) - matches = (char **)NULL; - ind = 0; - } - - ret = matches ? matches[ind] : (char *)NULL; - ind++; - return ret; -} - -static int -bash_glob_completion_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, glob_complete_word); -} - -/* A special quoting function so we don't end up quoting globbing characters - in the word if there are no matches or multiple matches. */ -static char * -bash_glob_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp) - char *s; - int rtype; - char *qcp; -{ - if (globorig && qcp && *qcp == '\0' && STREQ (s, globorig)) - return (savestring (s)); - else - return (bash_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp)); -} - -static int -bash_glob_complete_word (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r; - rl_quote_func_t *orig_quoting_function; - - if (rl_editing_mode == EMACS_EDITING_MODE) - rl_explicit_arg = 1; /* force `*' append */ - orig_quoting_function = rl_filename_quoting_function; - rl_filename_quoting_function = bash_glob_quote_filename; - - r = bash_glob_completion_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_glob_complete_word)); - - rl_filename_quoting_function = orig_quoting_function; - return r; -} - -static int -bash_glob_expand_word (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return bash_glob_completion_internal ('*'); -} - -static int -bash_glob_list_expansions (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return bash_glob_completion_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, generator) - int what_to_do; - rl_compentry_func_t *generator; -{ - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - int r; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - rl_completion_entry_function = generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - r = rl_complete_internal (what_to_do); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - return r; -} - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - -#if defined (VI_MODE) -/* Completion, from vi mode's point of view. This is a modified version of - rl_vi_complete which uses the bash globbing code to implement what POSIX - specifies, which is to append a `*' and attempt filename generation (which - has the side effect of expanding any globbing characters in the word). */ -static int -bash_vi_complete (count, key) - int count, key; -{ -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - int p, r; - char *t; - - if ((rl_point < rl_end) && (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point]))) - { - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point + 1])) - rl_vi_end_word (1, 'E'); - rl_point++; - } - - /* Find boundaries of current word, according to vi definition of a - `bigword'. */ - t = 0; - if (rl_point > 0) - { - p = rl_point; - rl_vi_bWord (1, 'B'); - r = rl_point; - rl_point = p; - p = r; - - t = substring (rl_line_buffer, p, rl_point); - } - - if (t && glob_pattern_p (t) == 0) - rl_explicit_arg = 1; /* XXX - force glob_complete_word to append `*' */ - FREE (t); - - if (key == '*') /* Expansion and replacement. */ - r = bash_glob_expand_word (count, key); - else if (key == '=') /* List possible completions. */ - r = bash_glob_list_expansions (count, key); - else if (key == '\\') /* Standard completion */ - r = bash_glob_complete_word (count, key); - else - r = rl_complete (0, key); - - if (key == '*' || key == '\\') - rl_vi_start_inserting (key, 1, 1); - - return (r); -#else - return rl_vi_complete (count, key); -#endif /* !SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ -} -#endif /* VI_MODE */ - -/* Filename quoting for completion. */ -/* A function to strip unquoted quote characters (single quotes, double - quotes, and backslashes). It allows single quotes to appear - within double quotes, and vice versa. It should be smarter. */ -static char * -bash_dequote_filename (text, quote_char) - char *text; - int quote_char; -{ - char *ret, *p, *r; - int l, quoted; - - l = strlen (text); - ret = (char *)xmalloc (l + 1); - for (quoted = quote_char, p = text, r = ret; p && *p; p++) - { - /* Allow backslash-escaped characters to pass through unscathed. */ - if (*p == '\\') - { - /* Backslashes are preserved within single quotes. */ - if (quoted == '\'') - *r++ = *p; - /* Backslashes are preserved within double quotes unless the - character is one that is defined to be escaped */ - else if (quoted == '"' && ((sh_syntaxtab[p[1]] & CBSDQUOTE) == 0)) - *r++ = *p; - - *r++ = *++p; - if (*p == '\0') - return ret; /* XXX - was break; */ - continue; - } - /* Close quote. */ - if (quoted && *p == quoted) - { - quoted = 0; - continue; - } - /* Open quote. */ - if (quoted == 0 && (*p == '\'' || *p == '"')) - { - quoted = *p; - continue; - } - *r++ = *p; - } - *r = '\0'; - return ret; -} - -/* Quote characters that the readline completion code would treat as - word break characters with backslashes. Pass backslash-quoted - characters through without examination. */ -static char * -quote_word_break_chars (text) - char *text; -{ - char *ret, *r, *s; - int l; - - l = strlen (text); - ret = (char *)xmalloc ((2 * l) + 1); - for (s = text, r = ret; *s; s++) - { - /* Pass backslash-quoted characters through, including the backslash. */ - if (*s == '\\') - { - *r++ = '\\'; - *r++ = *++s; - if (*s == '\0') - break; - continue; - } - /* OK, we have an unquoted character. Check its presence in - rl_completer_word_break_characters. */ - if (mbschr (rl_completer_word_break_characters, *s)) - *r++ = '\\'; - /* XXX -- check for standalone tildes here and backslash-quote them */ - if (s == text && *s == '~' && file_exists (text)) - *r++ = '\\'; - *r++ = *s; - } - *r = '\0'; - return ret; -} - -/* Use characters in STRING to populate the table of characters that should - be backslash-quoted. The table will be used for sh_backslash_quote from - this file. */ -static void -set_filename_bstab (string) - const char *string; -{ - const char *s; - - memset (filename_bstab, 0, sizeof (filename_bstab)); - for (s = string; s && *s; s++) - filename_bstab[*s] = 1; -} - -/* Quote a filename using double quotes, single quotes, or backslashes - depending on the value of completion_quoting_style. If we're - completing using backslashes, we need to quote some additional - characters (those that readline treats as word breaks), so we call - quote_word_break_chars on the result. This returns newly-allocated - memory. */ -static char * -bash_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp) - char *s; - int rtype; - char *qcp; -{ - char *rtext, *mtext, *ret; - int rlen, cs; - - rtext = (char *)NULL; - - /* If RTYPE == MULT_MATCH, it means that there is - more than one match. In this case, we do not add - the closing quote or attempt to perform tilde - expansion. If RTYPE == SINGLE_MATCH, we try - to perform tilde expansion, because single and double - quotes inhibit tilde expansion by the shell. */ - - cs = completion_quoting_style; - /* Might need to modify the default completion style based on *qcp, - since it's set to any user-provided opening quote. We also change - to single-quoting if there is no user-provided opening quote and - the word being completed contains newlines, since those are not - quoted correctly using backslashes (a backslash-newline pair is - special to the shell parser). */ - if (*qcp == '\0' && cs == COMPLETE_BSQUOTE && mbschr (s, '\n')) - cs = COMPLETE_SQUOTE; - else if (*qcp == '"') - cs = COMPLETE_DQUOTE; - else if (*qcp == '\'') - cs = COMPLETE_SQUOTE; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - else if (*qcp == '\0' && history_expansion && cs == COMPLETE_DQUOTE && - history_expansion_inhibited == 0 && mbschr (s, '!')) - cs = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - - if (*qcp == '"' && history_expansion && cs == COMPLETE_DQUOTE && - history_expansion_inhibited == 0 && mbschr (s, '!')) - { - cs = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - *qcp = '\0'; - } -#endif - - /* Don't tilde-expand backslash-quoted filenames, since only single and - double quotes inhibit tilde expansion. */ - mtext = s; - if (mtext[0] == '~' && rtype == SINGLE_MATCH && cs != COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - mtext = bash_tilde_expand (s, 0); - - switch (cs) - { - case COMPLETE_DQUOTE: - rtext = sh_double_quote (mtext); - break; - case COMPLETE_SQUOTE: - rtext = sh_single_quote (mtext); - break; - case COMPLETE_BSQUOTE: - rtext = sh_backslash_quote (mtext, complete_fullquote ? 0 : filename_bstab, 0); - break; - } - - if (mtext != s) - free (mtext); - - /* We may need to quote additional characters: those that readline treats - as word breaks that are not quoted by backslash_quote. */ - if (rtext && cs == COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - { - mtext = quote_word_break_chars (rtext); - free (rtext); - rtext = mtext; - } - - /* Leave the opening quote intact. The readline completion code takes - care of avoiding doubled opening quotes. */ - if (rtext) - { - rlen = strlen (rtext); - ret = (char *)xmalloc (rlen + 1); - strcpy (ret, rtext); - } - else - { - ret = (char *)xmalloc (rlen = 1); - ret[0] = '\0'; - } - - /* If there are multiple matches, cut off the closing quote. */ - if (rtype == MULT_MATCH && cs != COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - ret[rlen - 1] = '\0'; - free (rtext); - return ret; -} - -/* Support for binding readline key sequences to Unix commands. */ -static Keymap cmd_xmap; - -#ifdef _MINIX -static void -#else -static int -#endif -putx(c) - int c; -{ - int x; - x = putc (c, rl_outstream); -#ifndef _MINIX - return x; -#endif -} - -static int -bash_execute_unix_command (count, key) - int count; /* ignored */ - int key; -{ - Keymap ckmap; /* current keymap */ - Keymap xkmap; /* unix command executing keymap */ - rl_command_func_t *func; - int type; - register int i, r; - intmax_t mi; - sh_parser_state_t ps; - char *cmd, *value, *l, *l1, *ce; - SHELL_VAR *v; - char ibuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - /* First, we need to find the right command to execute. This is tricky, - because we might have already indirected into another keymap, so we - have to walk cmd_xmap using the entire key sequence. */ - cmd = (char *)rl_function_of_keyseq (rl_executing_keyseq, cmd_xmap, &type); - - if (cmd == 0 || type != ISMACR) - { - rl_crlf (); - internal_error (_("bash_execute_unix_command: cannot find keymap for command")); - rl_forced_update_display (); - return 1; - } - - ce = rl_get_termcap ("ce"); - if (ce) /* clear current line */ - { - fprintf (rl_outstream, "\r"); - tputs (ce, 1, putx); - fflush (rl_outstream); - } - else - rl_crlf (); /* move to a new line */ - - v = bind_variable ("READLINE_LINE", rl_line_buffer, 0); - if (v) - VSETATTR (v, att_exported); - l = v ? value_cell (v) : 0; - value = inttostr (rl_point, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf)); - v = bind_int_variable ("READLINE_POINT", value); - if (v) - VSETATTR (v, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - - save_parser_state (&ps); - r = parse_and_execute (cmd, "bash_execute_unix_command", SEVAL_NOHIST|SEVAL_NOFREE); - restore_parser_state (&ps); - - v = find_variable ("READLINE_LINE"); - l1 = v ? value_cell (v) : 0; - if (l1 != l) - maybe_make_readline_line (value_cell (v)); - v = find_variable ("READLINE_POINT"); - if (v && legal_number (value_cell (v), &mi)) - { - i = mi; - if (i != rl_point) - { - rl_point = i; - if (rl_point > rl_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (rl_point < 0) - rl_point = 0; - } - } - - unbind_variable ("READLINE_LINE"); - unbind_variable ("READLINE_POINT"); - array_needs_making = 1; - - /* and restore the readline buffer and display after command execution. */ - rl_forced_update_display (); - return 0; -} - -int -print_unix_command_map () -{ - Keymap save; - - save = rl_get_keymap (); - rl_set_keymap (cmd_xmap); - rl_macro_dumper (1); - rl_set_keymap (save); - return 0; -} - -static void -init_unix_command_map () -{ - cmd_xmap = rl_make_bare_keymap (); -} - -static int -isolate_sequence (string, ind, need_dquote, startp) - char *string; - int ind, need_dquote, *startp; -{ - register int i; - int c, passc, delim; - - for (i = ind; string[i] && whitespace (string[i]); i++) - ; - /* NEED_DQUOTE means that the first non-white character *must* be `"'. */ - if (need_dquote && string[i] != '"') - { - builtin_error (_("%s: first non-whitespace character is not `\"'"), string); - return -1; - } - - /* We can have delimited strings even if NEED_DQUOTE == 0, like the command - string to bind the key sequence to. */ - delim = (string[i] == '"' || string[i] == '\'') ? string[i] : 0; - - if (startp) - *startp = delim ? ++i : i; - - for (passc = 0; c = string[i]; i++) - { - if (passc) - { - passc = 0; - continue; - } - if (c == '\\') - { - passc++; - continue; - } - if (c == delim) - break; - } - - if (delim && string[i] != delim) - { - builtin_error (_("no closing `%c' in %s"), delim, string); - return -1; - } - - return i; -} - -int -bind_keyseq_to_unix_command (line) - char *line; -{ - Keymap kmap; - char *kseq, *value; - int i, kstart; - - if (cmd_xmap == 0) - init_unix_command_map (); - - kmap = rl_get_keymap (); - - /* We duplicate some of the work done by rl_parse_and_bind here, but - this code only has to handle `"keyseq": ["]command["]' and can - generate an error for anything else. */ - i = isolate_sequence (line, 0, 1, &kstart); - if (i < 0) - return -1; - - /* Create the key sequence string to pass to rl_generic_bind */ - kseq = substring (line, kstart, i); - - for ( ; line[i] && line[i] != ':'; i++) - ; - if (line[i] != ':') - { - builtin_error (_("%s: missing colon separator"), line); - FREE (kseq); - return -1; - } - - i = isolate_sequence (line, i + 1, 0, &kstart); - if (i < 0) - { - FREE (kseq); - return -1; - } - - /* Create the value string containing the command to execute. */ - value = substring (line, kstart, i); - - /* Save the command to execute and the key sequence in the CMD_XMAP */ - rl_generic_bind (ISMACR, kseq, value, cmd_xmap); - - /* and bind the key sequence in the current keymap to a function that - understands how to execute from CMD_XMAP */ - rl_bind_keyseq_in_map (kseq, bash_execute_unix_command, kmap); - - free (kseq); - return 0; -} - -/* Used by the programmable completion code. Complete TEXT as a filename, - but return only directories as matches. Dequotes the filename before - attempting to find matches. */ -char ** -bash_directory_completion_matches (text) - const char *text; -{ - char **m1; - char *dfn; - int qc; - - qc = rl_dispatching ? rl_completion_quote_character : 0; - dfn = bash_dequote_filename ((char *)text, qc); - m1 = rl_completion_matches (dfn, rl_filename_completion_function); - free (dfn); - - if (m1 == 0 || m1[0] == 0) - return m1; - /* We don't bother recomputing the lcd of the matches, because it will just - get thrown away by the programmable completion code and recomputed - later. */ - (void)bash_ignore_filenames (m1); - return m1; -} - -char * -bash_dequote_text (text) - const char *text; -{ - char *dtxt; - int qc; - - qc = (text[0] == '"' || text[0] == '\'') ? text[0] : 0; - dtxt = bash_dequote_filename ((char *)text, qc); - return (dtxt); -} - -/* This event hook is designed to be called after readline receives a signal - that interrupts read(2). It gives reasonable responsiveness to interrupts - and fatal signals without executing too much code in a signal handler - context. */ -static int -bash_event_hook () -{ - /* If we're going to longjmp to top_level, make sure we clean up readline */ - if (interrupt_state && signal_is_trapped (SIGINT) == 0) - rl_cleanup_after_signal (); - - bashline_reset_event_hook (); - check_signals_and_traps (); /* XXX */ -} - -#endif /* READLINE */ diff --git a/bashline.c~ b/bashline.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index 8dd15e1a6..000000000 --- a/bashline.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,4181 +0,0 @@ -/* bashline.c -- Bash's interface to the readline library. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_GRP_H) -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_NETDB_H) -# include -#endif - -#include - -#include -#include "chartypes.h" -#include "bashansi.h" -#include "bashintl.h" - -#include "shell.h" -#include "input.h" -#include "builtins.h" -#include "bashhist.h" -#include "bashline.h" -#include "execute_cmd.h" -#include "findcmd.h" -#include "pathexp.h" -#include "shmbutil.h" - -#include "builtins/common.h" - -#include -#include -#include - -#include - -#if defined (ALIAS) -# include "alias.h" -#endif - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -# include "pcomplete.h" -#endif - -/* These should agree with the defines for emacs_mode and vi_mode in - rldefs.h, even though that's not a public readline header file. */ -#ifndef EMACS_EDITING_MODE -# define NO_EDITING_MODE -1 -# define EMACS_EDITING_MODE 1 -# define VI_EDITING_MODE 0 -#endif - -#define RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE(s) ((s)[0] == 'o' && (s)[1] == 'n' && (s)[2] == '\0') - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) -extern int bash_brace_completion __P((int, int)); -#endif /* BRACE_COMPLETION */ - -/* To avoid including curses.h/term.h/termcap.h and that whole mess. */ -#ifdef _MINIX -extern int tputs __P((const char *string, int nlines, void (*outx)(int))); -#else -extern int tputs __P((const char *string, int nlines, int (*outx)(int))); -#endif - -/* Forward declarations */ - -/* Functions bound to keys in Readline for Bash users. */ -static int shell_expand_line __P((int, int)); -static int display_shell_version __P((int, int)); -static int operate_and_get_next __P((int, int)); - -static int bash_ignore_filenames __P((char **)); -static int bash_ignore_everything __P((char **)); - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -static char *history_expand_line_internal __P((char *)); -static int history_expand_line __P((int, int)); -static int tcsh_magic_space __P((int, int)); -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ -#ifdef ALIAS -static int alias_expand_line __P((int, int)); -#endif -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) && defined (ALIAS) -static int history_and_alias_expand_line __P((int, int)); -#endif - -static int bash_forward_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_backward_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_kill_shellword __P((int, int)); -static int bash_backward_kill_shellword __P((int, int)); - -/* Helper functions for Readline. */ -static char *restore_tilde __P((char *, char *)); - -static char *bash_filename_rewrite_hook __P((char *, int)); - -static void bash_directory_expansion __P((char **)); -static int bash_filename_stat_hook __P((char **)); -static int bash_command_name_stat_hook __P((char **)); -static int bash_directory_completion_hook __P((char **)); -static int filename_completion_ignore __P((char **)); -static int bash_push_line __P((void)); - -static int executable_completion __P((const char *, int)); - -static rl_icppfunc_t *save_directory_hook __P((void)); -static void restore_directory_hook __P((rl_icppfunc_t)); - -static void cleanup_expansion_error __P((void)); -static void maybe_make_readline_line __P((char *)); -static void set_up_new_line __P((char *)); - -static int check_redir __P((int)); -static char **attempt_shell_completion __P((const char *, int, int)); -static char *variable_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); -static char *hostname_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); -static char *command_subst_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); - -static void build_history_completion_array __P((void)); -static char *history_completion_generator __P((const char *, int)); -static int dynamic_complete_history __P((int, int)); -static int bash_dabbrev_expand __P((int, int)); - -static void initialize_hostname_list __P((void)); -static void add_host_name __P((char *)); -static void snarf_hosts_from_file __P((char *)); -static char **hostnames_matching __P((char *)); - -static void _ignore_completion_names __P((char **, sh_ignore_func_t *)); -static int name_is_acceptable __P((const char *)); -static int test_for_directory __P((const char *)); -static int return_zero __P((const char *)); - -static char *bash_dequote_filename __P((char *, int)); -static char *quote_word_break_chars __P((char *)); -static void set_filename_bstab __P((const char *)); -static char *bash_quote_filename __P((char *, int, char *)); - -#ifdef _MINIX -static void putx __P((int)); -#else -static int putx __P((int)); -#endif -static int bash_execute_unix_command __P((int, int)); -static void init_unix_command_map __P((void)); -static int isolate_sequence __P((char *, int, int, int *)); - -static int set_saved_history __P((void)); - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static int posix_edit_macros __P((int, int)); -#endif - -static int bash_event_hook __P((void)); - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -static int find_cmd_start __P((int)); -static int find_cmd_end __P((int)); -static char *find_cmd_name __P((int, int *, int *)); -static char *prog_complete_return __P((const char *, int)); - -static char **prog_complete_matches; -#endif - -/* Variables used here but defined in other files. */ -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -extern int hist_verify; -#endif - -extern int current_command_line_count, saved_command_line_count; -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern int array_needs_making; -extern int posixly_correct, no_symbolic_links; -extern char *current_prompt_string, *ps1_prompt; -extern STRING_INT_ALIST word_token_alist[]; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *last_shell_builtin, *this_shell_builtin; - -/* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS specifies that we have individual - completion functions which indicate what type of completion should be - done (at or before point) that can be bound to key sequences with - the readline library. */ -#define SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) -static int bash_specific_completion __P((int, rl_compentry_func_t *)); - -static int bash_complete_filename_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_username_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_hostname_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_variable_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_complete_command_internal __P((int)); - -static int bash_complete_filename __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_filename_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_username __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_username_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_hostname __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_hostname_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_variable __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_variable_completions __P((int, int)); -static int bash_complete_command __P((int, int)); -static int bash_possible_command_completions __P((int, int)); - -static char *glob_complete_word __P((const char *, int)); -static int bash_glob_completion_internal __P((int)); -static int bash_glob_complete_word __P((int, int)); -static int bash_glob_expand_word __P((int, int)); -static int bash_glob_list_expansions __P((int, int)); - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - -static int edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int, int, char *)); -#if defined (VI_MODE) -static int vi_edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int)); -static int bash_vi_complete __P((int, int)); -#endif -static int emacs_edit_and_execute_command __P((int, int)); - -/* Non-zero once initalize_readline () has been called. */ -int bash_readline_initialized = 0; - -/* If non-zero, we do hostname completion, breaking words at `@' and - trying to complete the stuff after the `@' from our own internal - host list. */ -int perform_hostname_completion = 1; - -/* If non-zero, we don't do command completion on an empty line. */ -int no_empty_command_completion; - -/* Set FORCE_FIGNORE if you want to honor FIGNORE even if it ignores the - only possible matches. Set to 0 if you want to match filenames if they - are the only possible matches, even if FIGNORE says to. */ -int force_fignore = 1; - -/* Perform spelling correction on directory names during word completion */ -int dircomplete_spelling = 0; - -/* Expand directory names during word/filename completion. */ -#if DIRCOMPLETE_EXPAND_DEFAULT -int dircomplete_expand = 1; -int dircomplete_expand_relpath = 1; -#else -int dircomplete_expand = 0; -int dircomplete_expand_relpath = 0; -#endif - -/* When non-zero, perform `normal' shell quoting on completed filenames - even when the completed name contains a directory name with a shell - variable referene, so dollar signs in a filename get quoted appropriately. - Set to zero to remove dollar sign (and braces or parens as needed) from - the set of characters that will be quoted. */ -int complete_fullquote = 1; - -static char *bash_completer_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"'@><=;|&(:"; -static char *bash_nohostname_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"'><=;|&(:"; -/* )) */ - -static const char *default_filename_quote_characters = " \t\n\\\"'@<>=;|&()#$`?*[!:{~"; /*}*/ -static char *custom_filename_quote_characters = 0; -static char filename_bstab[256]; - -static rl_hook_func_t *old_rl_startup_hook = (rl_hook_func_t *)NULL; - -static int dot_in_path = 0; - -/* Set to non-zero when dabbrev-expand is running */ -static int dabbrev_expand_active = 0; - -/* What kind of quoting is performed by bash_quote_filename: - COMPLETE_DQUOTE = double-quoting the filename - COMPLETE_SQUOTE = single_quoting the filename - COMPLETE_BSQUOTE = backslash-quoting special chars in the filename -*/ -#define COMPLETE_DQUOTE 1 -#define COMPLETE_SQUOTE 2 -#define COMPLETE_BSQUOTE 3 -static int completion_quoting_style = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - -/* Flag values for the final argument to bash_default_completion */ -#define DEFCOMP_CMDPOS 1 - -/* Change the readline VI-mode keymaps into or out of Posix.2 compliance. - Called when the shell is put into or out of `posix' mode. */ -void -posix_readline_initialize (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - if (on_or_off) - rl_variable_bind ("comment-begin", "#"); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_bind_key_in_map (CTRL ('I'), on_or_off ? rl_insert : rl_complete, vi_insertion_keymap); -#endif -} - -void -reset_completer_word_break_chars () -{ - rl_completer_word_break_characters = perform_hostname_completion ? savestring (bash_completer_word_break_characters) : savestring (bash_nohostname_word_break_characters); -} - -/* When this function returns, rl_completer_word_break_characters points to - dynamically allocated memory. */ -int -enable_hostname_completion (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - int old_value; - char *at, *nv, *nval; - - old_value = perform_hostname_completion; - - if (on_or_off) - { - perform_hostname_completion = 1; - rl_special_prefixes = "$@"; - } - else - { - perform_hostname_completion = 0; - rl_special_prefixes = "$"; - } - - /* Now we need to figure out how to appropriately modify and assign - rl_completer_word_break_characters depending on whether we want - hostname completion on or off. */ - - /* If this is the first time this has been called - (bash_readline_initialized == 0), use the sames values as before, but - allocate new memory for rl_completer_word_break_characters. */ - - if (bash_readline_initialized == 0 && - (rl_completer_word_break_characters == 0 || - rl_completer_word_break_characters == rl_basic_word_break_characters)) - { - if (on_or_off) - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (bash_completer_word_break_characters); - else - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (bash_nohostname_word_break_characters); - } - else - { - /* See if we have anything to do. */ - at = strchr (rl_completer_word_break_characters, '@'); - if ((at == 0 && on_or_off == 0) || (at != 0 && on_or_off != 0)) - return old_value; - - /* We have something to do. Do it. */ - nval = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (rl_completer_word_break_characters) + 1 + on_or_off); - - if (on_or_off == 0) - { - /* Turn it off -- just remove `@' from word break chars. We want - to remove all occurrences of `@' from the char list, so we loop - rather than just copy the rest of the list over AT. */ - for (nv = nval, at = rl_completer_word_break_characters; *at; ) - if (*at != '@') - *nv++ = *at++; - else - at++; - *nv = '\0'; - } - else - { - nval[0] = '@'; - strcpy (nval + 1, rl_completer_word_break_characters); - } - - free (rl_completer_word_break_characters); - rl_completer_word_break_characters = nval; - } - - return (old_value); -} - -/* Called once from parse.y if we are going to use readline. */ -void -initialize_readline () -{ - rl_command_func_t *func; - char kseq[2]; - - if (bash_readline_initialized) - return; - - rl_terminal_name = get_string_value ("TERM"); - rl_instream = stdin; - rl_outstream = stderr; - - /* Allow conditional parsing of the ~/.inputrc file. */ - rl_readline_name = "Bash"; - - /* Add bindable names before calling rl_initialize so they may be - referenced in the various inputrc files. */ - rl_add_defun ("shell-expand-line", shell_expand_line, -1); -#ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_add_defun ("history-expand-line", history_expand_line, -1); - rl_add_defun ("magic-space", tcsh_magic_space, -1); -#endif - - rl_add_defun ("shell-forward-word", bash_forward_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-backward-word", bash_backward_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-kill-word", bash_kill_shellword, -1); - rl_add_defun ("shell-backward-kill-word", bash_backward_kill_shellword, -1); - -#ifdef ALIAS - rl_add_defun ("alias-expand-line", alias_expand_line, -1); -# ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_add_defun ("history-and-alias-expand-line", history_and_alias_expand_line, -1); -# endif -#endif - - /* Backwards compatibility. */ - rl_add_defun ("insert-last-argument", rl_yank_last_arg, -1); - - rl_add_defun ("operate-and-get-next", operate_and_get_next, -1); - rl_add_defun ("display-shell-version", display_shell_version, -1); - rl_add_defun ("edit-and-execute-command", emacs_edit_and_execute_command, -1); - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) - rl_add_defun ("complete-into-braces", bash_brace_completion, -1); -#endif - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - rl_add_defun ("complete-filename", bash_complete_filename, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-filename-completions", bash_possible_filename_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-username", bash_complete_username, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-username-completions", bash_possible_username_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-hostname", bash_complete_hostname, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-hostname-completions", bash_possible_hostname_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-variable", bash_complete_variable, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-variable-completions", bash_possible_variable_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("complete-command", bash_complete_command, -1); - rl_add_defun ("possible-command-completions", bash_possible_command_completions, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-complete-word", bash_glob_complete_word, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-expand-word", bash_glob_expand_word, -1); - rl_add_defun ("glob-list-expansions", bash_glob_list_expansions, -1); -#endif - - rl_add_defun ("dynamic-complete-history", dynamic_complete_history, -1); - rl_add_defun ("dabbrev-expand", bash_dabbrev_expand, -1); - - /* Bind defaults before binding our custom shell keybindings. */ - if (RL_ISSTATE(RL_STATE_INITIALIZED) == 0) - rl_initialize (); - - /* Bind up our special shell functions. */ - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL('E'), shell_expand_line, emacs_meta_keymap); - -#ifdef BANG_HISTORY - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('^', history_expand_line, emacs_meta_keymap); -#endif - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('O'), operate_and_get_next, emacs_standard_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('V'), display_shell_version, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - /* In Bash, the user can switch editing modes with "set -o [vi emacs]", - so it is not necessary to allow C-M-j for context switching. Turn - off this occasionally confusing behaviour. */ - kseq[0] = CTRL('J'); - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == rl_vi_editing_mode) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('J'), emacs_meta_keymap); - kseq[0] = CTRL('M'); - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == rl_vi_editing_mode) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('M'), emacs_meta_keymap); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_unbind_key_in_map (CTRL('E'), vi_movement_keymap); -#endif - -#if defined (BRACE_COMPLETION) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('{', bash_brace_completion, emacs_meta_keymap); /*}*/ -#endif /* BRACE_COMPLETION */ - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('/', bash_complete_filename, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('/', bash_possible_filename_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - /* Have to jump through hoops here because there is a default binding for - M-~ (rl_tilde_expand) */ - kseq[0] = '~'; - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == 0 || func == rl_tilde_expand) - rl_bind_keyseq_in_map (kseq, bash_complete_username, emacs_meta_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('~', bash_possible_username_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', bash_complete_hostname, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', bash_possible_hostname_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('$', bash_complete_variable, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('$', bash_possible_variable_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('!', bash_complete_command, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('!', bash_possible_command_completions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('g', bash_glob_complete_word, emacs_meta_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('*', bash_glob_expand_word, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('g', bash_glob_list_expansions, emacs_ctlx_keymap); - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - - kseq[0] = TAB; - kseq[1] = '\0'; - func = rl_function_of_keyseq (kseq, emacs_meta_keymap, (int *)NULL); - if (func == 0 || func == rl_tab_insert) - rl_bind_key_in_map (TAB, dynamic_complete_history, emacs_meta_keymap); - - /* Tell the completer that we want a crack first. */ - rl_attempted_completion_function = attempt_shell_completion; - - /* Tell the completer that we might want to follow symbolic links or - do other expansion on directory names. */ - set_directory_hook (); - - rl_filename_rewrite_hook = bash_filename_rewrite_hook; - - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - /* Tell the filename completer we want a chance to ignore some names. */ - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - /* Bind C-xC-e to invoke emacs and run result as commands. */ - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map (CTRL ('E'), emacs_edit_and_execute_command, emacs_ctlx_keymap); -#if defined (VI_MODE) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('v', vi_edit_and_execute_command, vi_movement_keymap); -# if defined (ALIAS) - rl_bind_key_if_unbound_in_map ('@', posix_edit_macros, vi_movement_keymap); -# endif - - rl_bind_key_in_map ('\\', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); - rl_bind_key_in_map ('*', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); - rl_bind_key_in_map ('=', bash_vi_complete, vi_movement_keymap); -#endif - - rl_completer_quote_characters = "'\""; - - /* This sets rl_completer_word_break_characters and rl_special_prefixes - to the appropriate values, depending on whether or not hostname - completion is enabled. */ - enable_hostname_completion (perform_hostname_completion); - - /* characters that need to be quoted when appearing in filenames. */ - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - - rl_filename_quoting_function = bash_quote_filename; - rl_filename_dequoting_function = bash_dequote_filename; - rl_char_is_quoted_p = char_is_quoted; - -#if 0 - /* This is superfluous and makes it impossible to use tab completion in - vi mode even when explicitly binding it in ~/.inputrc. sv_strict_posix() - should already have called posix_readline_initialize() when - posixly_correct was set. */ - if (posixly_correct) - posix_readline_initialize (1); -#endif - - bash_readline_initialized = 1; -} - -void -bashline_reinitialize () -{ - bash_readline_initialized = 0; -} - -void -bashline_set_event_hook () -{ - rl_signal_event_hook = bash_event_hook; -} - -void -bashline_reset_event_hook () -{ - rl_signal_event_hook = 0; -} - -/* On Sun systems at least, rl_attempted_completion_function can end up - getting set to NULL, and rl_completion_entry_function set to do command - word completion if Bash is interrupted while trying to complete a command - word. This just resets all the completion functions to the right thing. - It's called from throw_to_top_level(). */ -void -bashline_reset () -{ - tilde_initialize (); - rl_attempted_completion_function = attempt_shell_completion; - rl_completion_entry_function = NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - - set_directory_hook (); - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - bashline_reset_event_hook (); -} - -/* Contains the line to push into readline. */ -static char *push_to_readline = (char *)NULL; - -/* Push the contents of push_to_readline into the - readline buffer. */ -static int -bash_push_line () -{ - if (push_to_readline) - { - rl_insert_text (push_to_readline); - free (push_to_readline); - push_to_readline = (char *)NULL; - rl_startup_hook = old_rl_startup_hook; - } - return 0; -} - -/* Call this to set the initial text for the next line to read - from readline. */ -int -bash_re_edit (line) - char *line; -{ - FREE (push_to_readline); - - push_to_readline = savestring (line); - old_rl_startup_hook = rl_startup_hook; - rl_startup_hook = bash_push_line; - - return (0); -} - -static int -display_shell_version (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - rl_crlf (); - show_shell_version (0); - putc ('\r', rl_outstream); - fflush (rl_outstream); - rl_on_new_line (); - rl_redisplay (); - return 0; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Readline Stuff */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* If the user requests hostname completion, then simply build a list - of hosts, and complete from that forever more, or at least until - HOSTFILE is unset. */ - -/* THIS SHOULD BE A STRINGLIST. */ -/* The kept list of hostnames. */ -static char **hostname_list = (char **)NULL; - -/* The physical size of the above list. */ -static int hostname_list_size; - -/* The number of hostnames in the above list. */ -static int hostname_list_length; - -/* Whether or not HOSTNAME_LIST has been initialized. */ -int hostname_list_initialized = 0; - -/* Initialize the hostname completion table. */ -static void -initialize_hostname_list () -{ - char *temp; - - temp = get_string_value ("HOSTFILE"); - if (temp == 0) - temp = get_string_value ("hostname_completion_file"); - if (temp == 0) - temp = DEFAULT_HOSTS_FILE; - - snarf_hosts_from_file (temp); - - if (hostname_list) - hostname_list_initialized++; -} - -/* Add NAME to the list of hosts. */ -static void -add_host_name (name) - char *name; -{ - if (hostname_list_length + 2 > hostname_list_size) - { - hostname_list_size = (hostname_list_size + 32) - (hostname_list_size % 32); - hostname_list = strvec_resize (hostname_list, hostname_list_size); - } - - hostname_list[hostname_list_length++] = savestring (name); - hostname_list[hostname_list_length] = (char *)NULL; -} - -#define cr_whitespace(c) ((c) == '\r' || (c) == '\n' || whitespace(c)) - -static void -snarf_hosts_from_file (filename) - char *filename; -{ - FILE *file; - char *temp, buffer[256], name[256]; - register int i, start; - - file = fopen (filename, "r"); - if (file == 0) - return; - - while (temp = fgets (buffer, 255, file)) - { - /* Skip to first character. */ - for (i = 0; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]); i++) - ; - - /* If comment or blank line, ignore. */ - if (buffer[i] == '\0' || buffer[i] == '#') - continue; - - /* If `preprocessor' directive, do the include. */ - if (strncmp (buffer + i, "$include ", 9) == 0) - { - char *incfile, *t; - - /* Find start of filename. */ - for (incfile = buffer + i + 9; *incfile && whitespace (*incfile); incfile++) - ; - - /* Find end of filename. */ - for (t = incfile; *t && cr_whitespace (*t) == 0; t++) - ; - - *t = '\0'; - - snarf_hosts_from_file (incfile); - continue; - } - - /* Skip internet address if present. */ - if (DIGIT (buffer[i])) - for (; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]) == 0; i++); - - /* Gobble up names. Each name is separated with whitespace. */ - while (buffer[i]) - { - for (; cr_whitespace (buffer[i]); i++) - ; - if (buffer[i] == '\0' || buffer[i] == '#') - break; - - /* Isolate the current word. */ - for (start = i; buffer[i] && cr_whitespace (buffer[i]) == 0; i++) - ; - if (i == start) - continue; - strncpy (name, buffer + start, i - start); - name[i - start] = '\0'; - add_host_name (name); - } - } - fclose (file); -} - -/* Return the hostname list. */ -char ** -get_hostname_list () -{ - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - initialize_hostname_list (); - return (hostname_list); -} - -void -clear_hostname_list () -{ - register int i; - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - return; - for (i = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - free (hostname_list[i]); - hostname_list_length = hostname_list_initialized = 0; -} - -/* Return a NULL terminated list of hostnames which begin with TEXT. - Initialize the hostname list the first time if neccessary. - The array is malloc ()'ed, but not the individual strings. */ -static char ** -hostnames_matching (text) - char *text; -{ - register int i, len, nmatch, rsize; - char **result; - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - initialize_hostname_list (); - - if (hostname_list_initialized == 0) - return ((char **)NULL); - - /* Special case. If TEXT consists of nothing, then the whole list is - what is desired. */ - if (*text == '\0') - { - result = strvec_create (1 + hostname_list_length); - for (i = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - result[i] = hostname_list[i]; - result[i] = (char *)NULL; - return (result); - } - - /* Scan until found, or failure. */ - len = strlen (text); - result = (char **)NULL; - for (i = nmatch = rsize = 0; i < hostname_list_length; i++) - { - if (STREQN (text, hostname_list[i], len) == 0) - continue; - - /* OK, it matches. Add it to the list. */ - if (nmatch >= (rsize - 1)) - { - rsize = (rsize + 16) - (rsize % 16); - result = strvec_resize (result, rsize); - } - - result[nmatch++] = hostname_list[i]; - } - if (nmatch) - result[nmatch] = (char *)NULL; - return (result); -} - -/* The equivalent of the Korn shell C-o operate-and-get-next-history-line - editing command. */ -static int saved_history_line_to_use = -1; -static int last_saved_history_line = -1; - -#define HISTORY_FULL() (history_is_stifled () && history_length >= history_max_entries) - -static int -set_saved_history () -{ - /* XXX - compensate for assumption that history was `shuffled' if it was - actually not. */ - if (HISTORY_FULL () && - hist_last_line_added == 0 && - saved_history_line_to_use < history_length - 1) - saved_history_line_to_use++; - - if (saved_history_line_to_use >= 0) - { - rl_get_previous_history (history_length - saved_history_line_to_use, 0); - last_saved_history_line = saved_history_line_to_use; - } - saved_history_line_to_use = -1; - rl_startup_hook = old_rl_startup_hook; - return (0); -} - -static int -operate_and_get_next (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - int where; - - /* Accept the current line. */ - rl_newline (1, c); - - /* Find the current line, and find the next line to use. */ - where = where_history (); - - if (HISTORY_FULL () || (where >= history_length - 1)) - saved_history_line_to_use = where; - else - saved_history_line_to_use = where + 1; - - old_rl_startup_hook = rl_startup_hook; - rl_startup_hook = set_saved_history; - - return 0; -} - -/* This vi mode command causes VI_EDIT_COMMAND to be run on the current - command being entered (if no explicit argument is given), otherwise on - a command from the history file. */ - -#define VI_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e \"${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-vi}}\"" -#define EMACS_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e \"${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-emacs}}\"" -#define POSIX_VI_EDIT_COMMAND "fc -e vi" - -static int -edit_and_execute_command (count, c, editing_mode, edit_command) - int count, c, editing_mode; - char *edit_command; -{ - char *command, *metaval; - int r, rrs, metaflag; - sh_parser_state_t ps; - - rrs = rl_readline_state; - saved_command_line_count = current_command_line_count; - - /* Accept the current line. */ - rl_newline (1, c); - - if (rl_explicit_arg) - { - command = (char *)xmalloc (strlen (edit_command) + 8); - sprintf (command, "%s %d", edit_command, count); - } - else - { - /* Take the command we were just editing, add it to the history file, - then call fc to operate on it. We have to add a dummy command to - the end of the history because fc ignores the last command (assumes - it's supposed to deal with the command before the `fc'). */ - /* This breaks down when using command-oriented history and are not - finished with the command, so we should not ignore the last command */ - using_history (); - current_command_line_count++; /* for rl_newline above */ - bash_add_history (rl_line_buffer); - current_command_line_count = 0; /* for dummy history entry */ - bash_add_history (""); - history_lines_this_session++; - using_history (); - command = savestring (edit_command); - } - - metaval = rl_variable_value ("input-meta"); - metaflag = RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE (metaval); - - /* Now, POSIX.1-2001 and SUSv3 say that the commands executed from the - temporary file should be placed into the history. We don't do that - yet. */ - if (rl_deprep_term_function) - (*rl_deprep_term_function) (); - save_parser_state (&ps); - r = parse_and_execute (command, (editing_mode == VI_EDITING_MODE) ? "v" : "C-xC-e", SEVAL_NOHIST); - restore_parser_state (&ps); - if (rl_prep_term_function) - (*rl_prep_term_function) (metaflag); - - current_command_line_count = saved_command_line_count; - - /* Now erase the contents of the current line and undo the effects of the - rl_accept_line() above. We don't even want to make the text we just - executed available for undoing. */ - rl_line_buffer[0] = '\0'; /* XXX */ - rl_point = rl_end = 0; - rl_done = 0; - rl_readline_state = rrs; - - rl_forced_update_display (); - - return r; -} - -#if defined (VI_MODE) -static int -vi_edit_and_execute_command (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - if (posixly_correct) - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, VI_EDITING_MODE, POSIX_VI_EDIT_COMMAND)); - else - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, VI_EDITING_MODE, VI_EDIT_COMMAND)); -} -#endif /* VI_MODE */ - -static int -emacs_edit_and_execute_command (count, c) - int count, c; -{ - return (edit_and_execute_command (count, c, EMACS_EDITING_MODE, EMACS_EDIT_COMMAND)); -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static int -posix_edit_macros (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int c; - char alias_name[3], *alias_value, *macro; - - c = rl_read_key (); - alias_name[0] = '_'; - alias_name[1] = c; - alias_name[2] = '\0'; - - alias_value = get_alias_value (alias_name); - if (alias_value && *alias_value) - { - macro = savestring (alias_value); - rl_push_macro_input (macro); - } - return 0; -} -#endif - -/* Bindable commands that move `shell-words': that is, sequences of - non-unquoted-metacharacters. */ - -#define WORDDELIM(c) (shellmeta(c) || shellblank(c)) - -static int -bash_forward_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - size_t slen; - int sindex, c, p; - DECLARE_MBSTATE; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_backward_shellword (-count, key)); - - /* The tricky part of this is deciding whether or not the first character - we're on is an unquoted metacharacter. Not completely handled yet. */ - /* XXX - need to test this stuff with backslash-escaped shell - metacharacters and unclosed single- and double-quoted strings. */ - - p = rl_point; - slen = rl_end; - - while (count) - { - if (p == rl_end) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - return 0; - } - - /* Are we in a quoted string? If we are, move to the end of the quoted - string and continue the outer loop. We only want quoted strings, not - backslash-escaped characters, but char_is_quoted doesn't - differentiate. */ - if (char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) && p > 0 && rl_line_buffer[p-1] != '\\') - { - do - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - while (p < rl_end && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p)); - count--; - continue; - } - - /* Rest of code assumes we are not in a quoted string. */ - /* Move forward until we hit a non-metacharacter. */ - while (p < rl_end && (c = rl_line_buffer[p]) && WORDDELIM (c)) - { - switch (c) - { - default: - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - continue; /* straight back to loop, don't increment p */ - case '\\': - if (p < rl_end && rl_line_buffer[p]) - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - case '\'': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "'", SD_NOJMP); - break; - case '"': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "\"", SD_NOJMP); - break; - } - - if (p < rl_end) - p++; - } - - if (rl_line_buffer[p] == 0 || p == rl_end) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - rl_ding (); - return 0; - } - - /* Now move forward until we hit a non-quoted metacharacter or EOL */ - while (p < rl_end && (c = rl_line_buffer[p]) && WORDDELIM (c) == 0) - { - switch (c) - { - default: - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - continue; /* straight back to loop, don't increment p */ - case '\\': - if (p < rl_end && rl_line_buffer[p]) - ADVANCE_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - case '\'': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "'", SD_NOJMP); - break; - case '"': - p = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, ++p, "\"", SD_NOJMP); - break; - } - - if (p < rl_end) - p++; - } - - if (p == rl_end || rl_line_buffer[p] == 0) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - return (0); - } - - count--; - } - - rl_point = p; - return (0); -} - -static int -bash_backward_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - size_t slen; - int sindex, c, p; - DECLARE_MBSTATE; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_forward_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - slen = rl_end; - - while (count) - { - if (p == 0) - { - rl_point = 0; - return 0; - } - - /* Move backward until we hit a non-metacharacter. */ - while (p > 0) - { - c = rl_line_buffer[p]; - if (WORDDELIM (c) && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) == 0) - BACKUP_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - break; - } - - if (p == 0) - { - rl_point = 0; - return 0; - } - - /* Now move backward until we hit a metacharacter or BOL. */ - while (p > 0) - { - c = rl_line_buffer[p]; - if (WORDDELIM (c) && char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, p) == 0) - break; - BACKUP_CHAR (rl_line_buffer, slen, p); - } - - count--; - } - - rl_point = p; - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_kill_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int p; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_backward_kill_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - bash_forward_shellword (count, key); - - if (rl_point != p) - rl_kill_text (p, rl_point); - - rl_point = p; - if (rl_editing_mode == 1) /* 1 == emacs_mode */ - rl_mark = rl_point; - - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_backward_kill_shellword (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int p; - - if (count < 0) - return (bash_kill_shellword (-count, key)); - - p = rl_point; - bash_backward_shellword (count, key); - - if (rl_point != p) - rl_kill_text (p, rl_point); - - if (rl_editing_mode == 1) /* 1 == emacs_mode */ - rl_mark = rl_point; - - return 0; -} - - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* How To Do Shell Completion */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#define COMMAND_SEPARATORS ";|&{(`" -/* )} */ -#define COMMAND_SEPARATORS_PLUS_WS ";|&{(` \t" -/* )} */ - -/* check for redirections and other character combinations that are not - command separators */ -static int -check_redir (ti) - int ti; -{ - register int this_char, prev_char; - - /* Handle the two character tokens `>&', `<&', and `>|'. - We are not in a command position after one of these. */ - this_char = rl_line_buffer[ti]; - prev_char = rl_line_buffer[ti - 1]; - - if ((this_char == '&' && (prev_char == '<' || prev_char == '>')) || - (this_char == '|' && prev_char == '>')) - return (1); - else if (this_char == '{' && prev_char == '$') /*}*/ - return (1); -#if 0 /* Not yet */ - else if (this_char == '(' && prev_char == '$') /*)*/ - return (1); - else if (this_char == '(' && prev_char == '<') /*)*/ - return (1); -#if defined (EXTENDED_GLOB) - else if (extended_glob && this_char == '(' && prev_char == '!') /*)*/ - return (1); -#endif -#endif - else if (char_is_quoted (rl_line_buffer, ti)) - return (1); - return (0); -} - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -/* - * XXX - because of the <= start test, and setting os = s+1, this can - * potentially return os > start. This is probably not what we want to - * happen, but fix later after 2.05a-release. - */ -static int -find_cmd_start (start) - int start; -{ - register int s, os; - - os = 0; - /* Flags == SD_NOJMP only because we want to skip over command substitutions - in assignment statements. Have to test whether this affects `standalone' - command substitutions as individual words. */ - while (((s = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, os, COMMAND_SEPARATORS, SD_NOJMP/*|SD_NOSKIPCMD*/)) <= start) && - rl_line_buffer[s]) - os = s+1; - return os; -} - -static int -find_cmd_end (end) - int end; -{ - register int e; - - e = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, end, COMMAND_SEPARATORS, SD_NOJMP); - return e; -} - -static char * -find_cmd_name (start, sp, ep) - int start; - int *sp, *ep; -{ - char *name; - register int s, e; - - for (s = start; whitespace (rl_line_buffer[s]); s++) - ; - - /* skip until a shell break character */ - e = skip_to_delim (rl_line_buffer, s, "()<>;&| \t\n", SD_NOJMP); - - name = substring (rl_line_buffer, s, e); - - if (sp) - *sp = s; - if (ep) - *ep = e; - - return (name); -} - -static char * -prog_complete_return (text, matchnum) - const char *text; - int matchnum; -{ - static int ind; - - if (matchnum == 0) - ind = 0; - - if (prog_complete_matches == 0 || prog_complete_matches[ind] == 0) - return (char *)NULL; - return (prog_complete_matches[ind++]); -} - -#endif /* PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION */ - -/* Do some completion on TEXT. The indices of TEXT in RL_LINE_BUFFER are - at START and END. Return an array of matches, or NULL if none. */ -static char ** -attempt_shell_completion (text, start, end) - const char *text; - int start, end; -{ - int in_command_position, ti, saveti, qc, dflags; - char **matches, *command_separator_chars; -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - int have_progcomps, was_assignment; -#endif - - command_separator_chars = COMMAND_SEPARATORS; - matches = (char **)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - rl_filename_quote_characters = default_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - set_directory_hook (); - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_filename_stat_hook; - - /* Determine if this could be a command word. It is if it appears at - the start of the line (ignoring preceding whitespace), or if it - appears after a character that separates commands. It cannot be a - command word if we aren't at the top-level prompt. */ - ti = start - 1; - saveti = qc = -1; - - while ((ti > -1) && (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[ti]))) - ti--; - -#if 1 - /* If this is an open quote, maybe we're trying to complete a quoted - command name. */ - if (ti >= 0 && (rl_line_buffer[ti] == '"' || rl_line_buffer[ti] == '\'')) - { - qc = rl_line_buffer[ti]; - saveti = ti--; - while (ti > -1 && (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[ti]))) - ti--; - } -#endif - - in_command_position = 0; - if (ti < 0) - { - /* Only do command completion at the start of a line when we - are prompting at the top level. */ - if (current_prompt_string == ps1_prompt) - in_command_position++; - else if (parser_in_command_position ()) - in_command_position++; - } - else if (member (rl_line_buffer[ti], command_separator_chars)) - { - in_command_position++; - - if (check_redir (ti) == 1) - in_command_position = 0; - } - else - { - /* This still could be in command position. It is possible - that all of the previous words on the line are variable - assignments. */ - } - - /* Check that we haven't incorrectly flagged a closed command substitution - as indicating we're in a command position. */ - if (in_command_position && ti >= 0 && rl_line_buffer[ti] == '`' && - *text != '`' && unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, end, "`") == 0) - in_command_position = 0; - - /* Special handling for command substitution. If *TEXT is a backquote, - it can be the start or end of an old-style command substitution, or - unmatched. If it's unmatched, both calls to unclosed_pair will - succeed. Don't bother if readline found a single quote and we are - completing on the substring. */ - if (*text == '`' && rl_completion_quote_character != '\'' && - (in_command_position || (unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, start, "`") && - unclosed_pair (rl_line_buffer, end, "`")))) - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_subst_completion_function); - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - /* Attempt programmable completion. */ - have_progcomps = prog_completion_enabled && (progcomp_size () > 0); - if (matches == 0 && (in_command_position == 0 || text[0] == '\0') && - current_prompt_string == ps1_prompt) - { - int s, e, s1, e1, os, foundcs; - char *n; - - /* XXX - don't free the members */ - if (prog_complete_matches) - free (prog_complete_matches); - prog_complete_matches = (char **)NULL; - - os = start; - n = 0; - s = find_cmd_start (os); - e = find_cmd_end (end); - do - { - /* Skip over assignment statements preceding a command name. If we - don't find a command name at all, we can perform command name - completion. If we find a partial command name, we should perform - command name completion on it. */ - FREE (n); - n = find_cmd_name (s, &s1, &e1); - s = e1 + 1; - } - while (was_assignment = assignment (n, 0)); - s = s1; /* reset to index where name begins */ - - /* s == index of where command name begins (reset above) - e == end of current command, may be end of line - s1 = index of where command name begins - e1 == index of where command name ends - start == index of where word to be completed begins - end == index of where word to be completed ends - if (s == start) we are doing command word completion for sure - if (e1 == end) we are at the end of the command name and completing it */ - if (start == 0 && end == 0 && e != 0 && text[0] == '\0') /* beginning of non-empty line */ - foundcs = 0; - else if (start == end && start == s1 && e != 0 && e1 > end) /* beginning of command name, leading whitespace */ - foundcs = 0; - else if (e == 0 && e == s && text[0] == '\0' && have_progcomps) /* beginning of empty line */ - prog_complete_matches = programmable_completions ("_EmptycmD_", text, s, e, &foundcs); - else if (start == end && text[0] == '\0' && s1 > start && whitespace (rl_line_buffer[start])) - foundcs = 0; /* whitespace before command name */ - else if (e > s && was_assignment == 0 && e1 == end && rl_line_buffer[e] == 0 && whitespace (rl_line_buffer[e-1]) == 0) - { - /* not assignment statement, but still want to perform command - completion if we are composing command word. */ - foundcs = 0; - in_command_position = s == start && STREQ (n, text); /* XXX */ - } - else if (e > s && was_assignment == 0 && have_progcomps) - { - prog_complete_matches = programmable_completions (n, text, s, e, &foundcs); - /* command completion if programmable completion fails */ - in_command_position = s == start && STREQ (n, text); /* XXX */ - } - else if (s >= e && n[0] == '\0' && text[0] == '\0' && start > 0) - { - foundcs = 0; /* empty command name following assignments */ - in_command_position = was_assignment; - } - else if (s == start && e == end && STREQ (n, text) && start > 0) - { - foundcs = 0; /* partial command name following assignments */ - in_command_position = 1; - } - else - foundcs = 0; - FREE (n); - /* XXX - if we found a COMPSPEC for the command, just return whatever - the programmable completion code returns, and disable the default - filename completion that readline will do unless the COPT_DEFAULT - option has been set with the `-o default' option to complete or - compopt. */ - if (foundcs) - { - pcomp_set_readline_variables (foundcs, 1); - /* Turn what the programmable completion code returns into what - readline wants. I should have made compute_lcd_of_matches - external... */ - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, prog_complete_return); - if ((foundcs & COPT_DEFAULT) == 0) - rl_attempted_completion_over = 1; /* no default */ - if (matches || ((foundcs & COPT_BASHDEFAULT) == 0)) - return (matches); - } - } -#endif - - if (matches == 0) - { - dflags = 0; - if (in_command_position) - dflags |= DEFCOMP_CMDPOS; - matches = bash_default_completion (text, start, end, qc, dflags); - } - - return matches; -} - -char ** -bash_default_completion (text, start, end, qc, compflags) - const char *text; - int start, end, qc, compflags; -{ - char **matches, *t; - - matches = (char **)NULL; - - /* New posix-style command substitution or variable name? */ - if (!matches && *text == '$') - { - if (qc != '\'' && text[1] == '(') /* ) */ - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_subst_completion_function); - else - { - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, variable_completion_function); - if (matches && matches[0] && matches[1] == 0) - { - t = savestring (matches[0]); - bash_filename_stat_hook (&t); - /* doesn't use test_for_directory because that performs tilde - expansion */ - if (file_isdir (t)) - rl_completion_append_character = '/'; - free (t); - } - } - } - - /* If the word starts in `~', and there is no slash in the word, then - try completing this word as a username. */ - if (matches == 0 && *text == '~' && mbschr (text, '/') == 0) - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, rl_username_completion_function); - - /* Another one. Why not? If the word starts in '@', then look through - the world of known hostnames for completion first. */ - if (matches == 0 && perform_hostname_completion && *text == '@') - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, hostname_completion_function); - - /* And last, (but not least) if this word is in a command position, then - complete over possible command names, including aliases, functions, - and command names. */ - if (matches == 0 && (compflags & DEFCOMP_CMDPOS)) - { - /* If END == START and text[0] == 0, we are trying to complete an empty - command word. */ - if (no_empty_command_completion && end == start && text[0] == '\0') - { - matches = (char **)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = bash_ignore_everything; - } - else - { -#define CMD_IS_DIR(x) (absolute_pathname(x) == 0 && absolute_program(x) == 0 && *(x) != '~' && test_for_directory (x)) - - dot_in_path = 0; - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, command_word_completion_function); - - /* If we are attempting command completion and nothing matches, we - do not want readline to perform filename completion for us. We - still want to be able to complete partial pathnames, so set the - completion ignore function to something which will remove - filenames and leave directories in the match list. */ - if (matches == (char **)NULL) - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = bash_ignore_filenames; - else if (matches[1] == 0 && CMD_IS_DIR(matches[0]) && dot_in_path == 0) - /* If we found a single match, without looking in the current - directory (because it's not in $PATH), but the found name is - also a command in the current directory, suppress appending any - terminating character, since it's ambiguous. */ - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - else if (matches[0] && matches[1] && STREQ (matches[0], matches[1]) && CMD_IS_DIR (matches[0])) - /* There are multiple instances of the same match (duplicate - completions haven't yet been removed). In this case, all of - the matches will be the same, and the duplicate removal code - will distill them all down to one. We turn on - rl_completion_suppress_append for the same reason as above. - Remember: we only care if there's eventually a single unique - completion. If there are multiple completions this won't - make a difference and the problem won't occur. */ - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - } - } - - /* This could be a globbing pattern, so try to expand it using pathname - expansion. */ - if (!matches && glob_pattern_p (text)) - { - matches = rl_completion_matches (text, glob_complete_word); - /* A glob expression that matches more than one filename is problematic. - If we match more than one filename, punt. */ - if (matches && matches[1] && rl_completion_type == TAB) - { - strvec_dispose (matches); - matches = (char **)0; - } - else if (matches && matches[1] && rl_completion_type == '!') - { - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - } - } - - return (matches); -} - -static int -bash_command_name_stat_hook (name) - char **name; -{ - char *cname, *result; - - if (absolute_program (*name)) - return (bash_filename_stat_hook (name)); - - cname = *name; - /* XXX - we could do something here with converting aliases, builtins, - and functions into something that came out as executable, but we don't. */ - result = search_for_command (cname, 0); - if (result) - { - *name = result; - return 1; - } - return 0; -} - -static int -executable_completion (filename, searching_path) - const char *filename; - int searching_path; -{ - char *f; - int r; - - f = savestring (filename); - bash_directory_completion_hook (&f); - - r = searching_path ? executable_file (f) : executable_or_directory (f); - free (f); - return r; -} - -/* This is the function to call when the word to complete is in a position - where a command word can be found. It grovels $PATH, looking for commands - that match. It also scans aliases, function names, and the shell_builtin - table. */ -char * -command_word_completion_function (hint_text, state) - const char *hint_text; - int state; -{ - static char *hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *path = (char *)NULL; - static char *val = (char *)NULL; - static char *filename_hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *dequoted_hint = (char *)NULL; - static char *directory_part = (char *)NULL; - static char **glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - static int path_index, hint_len, dequoted_len, istate, igncase; - static int mapping_over, local_index, searching_path, hint_is_dir; - static int old_glob_ignore_case, globpat; - static SHELL_VAR **varlist = (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; -#if defined (ALIAS) - static alias_t **alias_list = (alias_t **)NULL; -#endif /* ALIAS */ - char *temp, *cval; - - /* We have to map over the possibilities for command words. If we have - no state, then make one just for that purpose. */ - if (state == 0) - { - rl_filename_stat_hook = bash_command_name_stat_hook; - - if (dequoted_hint && dequoted_hint != hint) - free (dequoted_hint); - if (hint) - free (hint); - - mapping_over = searching_path = 0; - hint_is_dir = CMD_IS_DIR (hint_text); - val = (char *)NULL; - - temp = rl_variable_value ("completion-ignore-case"); - igncase = RL_BOOLEAN_VARIABLE_VALUE (temp); - - if (glob_matches) - { - free (glob_matches); - glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - } - - globpat = glob_pattern_p (hint_text); - - /* If this is an absolute program name, do not check it against - aliases, reserved words, functions or builtins. We must check - whether or not it is unique, and, if so, whether that filename - is executable. */ - if (globpat || absolute_program (hint_text)) - { - /* Perform tilde expansion on what's passed, so we don't end up - passing filenames with tildes directly to stat(). */ - if (*hint_text == '~') - { - hint = bash_tilde_expand (hint_text, 0); - directory_part = savestring (hint_text); - temp = strchr (directory_part, '/'); - if (temp) - *temp = 0; - else - { - free (directory_part); - directory_part = (char *)NULL; - } - } - else - hint = savestring (hint_text); - - dequoted_hint = hint; - /* If readline's completer found a quote character somewhere, but - didn't set the quote character, there must have been a quote - character embedded in the filename. It can't be at the start of - the filename, so we need to dequote the filename before we look - in the file system for it. */ - if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_completion_quote_character == 0) - { - dequoted_hint = bash_dequote_filename (hint, 0); - free (hint); - hint = dequoted_hint; - } - dequoted_len = hint_len = strlen (hint); - - if (filename_hint) - free (filename_hint); - - filename_hint = savestring (hint); - - istate = 0; - - if (globpat) - { - mapping_over = 5; - goto globword; - } - else - { - if (dircomplete_expand && path_dot_or_dotdot (filename_hint)) - { - dircomplete_expand = 0; - set_directory_hook (); - dircomplete_expand = 1; - } - mapping_over = 4; - goto inner; - } - } - - dequoted_hint = hint = savestring (hint_text); - dequoted_len = hint_len = strlen (hint); - - if (rl_completion_found_quote && rl_completion_quote_character == 0) - { - dequoted_hint = bash_dequote_filename (hint, 0); - dequoted_len = strlen (dequoted_hint); - } - - path = get_string_value ("PATH"); - path_index = dot_in_path = 0; - - /* Initialize the variables for each type of command word. */ - local_index = 0; - - if (varlist) - free (varlist); - - varlist = all_visible_functions (); - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (alias_list) - free (alias_list); - - alias_list = all_aliases (); -#endif /* ALIAS */ - } - - /* mapping_over says what we are currently hacking. Note that every case - in this list must fall through when there are no more possibilities. */ - - switch (mapping_over) - { - case 0: /* Aliases come first. */ -#if defined (ALIAS) - while (alias_list && alias_list[local_index]) - { - register char *alias; - - alias = alias_list[local_index++]->name; - - if (STREQN (alias, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (alias)); - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - - case 1: /* Then shell reserved words. */ - { - while (word_token_alist[local_index].word) - { - register char *reserved_word; - - reserved_word = word_token_alist[local_index++].word; - - if (STREQN (reserved_word, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (reserved_word)); - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - } - - case 2: /* Then function names. */ - while (varlist && varlist[local_index]) - { - register char *varname; - - varname = varlist[local_index++]->name; - - if (STREQN (varname, hint, hint_len)) - return (savestring (varname)); - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - - case 3: /* Then shell builtins. */ - for (; local_index < num_shell_builtins; local_index++) - { - /* Ignore it if it doesn't have a function pointer or if it - is not currently enabled. */ - if (!shell_builtins[local_index].function || - (shell_builtins[local_index].flags & BUILTIN_ENABLED) == 0) - continue; - - if (STREQN (shell_builtins[local_index].name, hint, hint_len)) - { - int i = local_index++; - - return (savestring (shell_builtins[i].name)); - } - } - local_index = 0; - mapping_over++; - } - -globword: - /* Limited support for completing command words with globbing chars. Only - a single match (multiple matches that end up reducing the number of - characters in the common prefix are bad) will ever be returned on - regular completion. */ - if (globpat) - { - if (state == 0) - { - glob_ignore_case = igncase; - glob_matches = shell_glob_filename (hint); - glob_ignore_case = old_glob_ignore_case; - - if (GLOB_FAILED (glob_matches) || glob_matches == 0) - { - glob_matches = (char **)NULL; - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - local_index = 0; - - if (glob_matches[1] && rl_completion_type == TAB) /* multiple matches are bad */ - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - while (val = glob_matches[local_index++]) - { - if (executable_or_directory (val)) - { - if (*hint_text == '~' && directory_part) - { - temp = restore_tilde (val, directory_part); - free (val); - val = temp; - } - return (val); - } - free (val); - } - - glob_ignore_case = old_glob_ignore_case; - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - /* If the text passed is a directory in the current directory, return it - as a possible match. Executables in directories in the current - directory can be specified using relative pathnames and successfully - executed even when `.' is not in $PATH. */ - if (hint_is_dir) - { - hint_is_dir = 0; /* only return the hint text once */ - return (savestring (hint_text)); - } - - /* Repeatedly call filename_completion_function while we have - members of PATH left. Question: should we stat each file? - Answer: we call executable_file () on each file. */ - outer: - - istate = (val != (char *)NULL); - - if (istate == 0) - { - char *current_path; - - /* Get the next directory from the path. If there is none, then we - are all done. */ - if (path == 0 || path[path_index] == 0 || - (current_path = extract_colon_unit (path, &path_index)) == 0) - return ((char *)NULL); - - searching_path = 1; - if (*current_path == 0) - { - free (current_path); - current_path = savestring ("."); - } - - if (*current_path == '~') - { - char *t; - - t = bash_tilde_expand (current_path, 0); - free (current_path); - current_path = t; - } - - if (current_path[0] == '.' && current_path[1] == '\0') - dot_in_path = 1; - - if (filename_hint) - free (filename_hint); - - filename_hint = sh_makepath (current_path, hint, 0); - free (current_path); /* XXX */ - } - - inner: - val = rl_filename_completion_function (filename_hint, istate); - if (mapping_over == 4 && dircomplete_expand) - set_directory_hook (); - - istate = 1; - - if (val == 0) - { - /* If the hint text is an absolute program, then don't bother - searching through PATH. */ - if (absolute_program (hint)) - return ((char *)NULL); - - goto outer; - } - else - { - int match, freetemp; - - if (absolute_program (hint)) - { - if (igncase == 0) - match = strncmp (val, hint, hint_len) == 0; - else - match = strncasecmp (val, hint, hint_len) == 0; - - /* If we performed tilde expansion, restore the original - filename. */ - if (*hint_text == '~') - temp = restore_tilde (val, directory_part); - else - temp = savestring (val); - freetemp = 1; - } - else - { - temp = strrchr (val, '/'); - - if (temp) - { - temp++; - if (igncase == 0) - freetemp = match = strncmp (temp, hint, hint_len) == 0; - else - freetemp = match = strncasecmp (temp, hint, hint_len) == 0; - if (match) - temp = savestring (temp); - } - else - freetemp = match = 0; - } - - /* If we have found a match, and it is an executable file, return it. - We don't return directory names when searching $PATH, since the - bash execution code won't find executables in directories which - appear in directories in $PATH when they're specified using - relative pathnames. */ -#if 0 - /* If we're not searching $PATH and we have a relative pathname, we - need to re-canonicalize it before testing whether or not it's an - executable or a directory so the shell treats .. relative to $PWD - according to the physical/logical option. The shell already - canonicalizes the directory name in order to tell readline where - to look, so not doing it here will be inconsistent. */ - /* XXX -- currently not used -- will introduce more inconsistency, - since shell does not canonicalize ../foo before passing it to - shell_execve(). */ - if (match && searching_path == 0 && *val == '.') - { - char *t, *t1; - - t = get_working_directory ("command-word-completion"); - t1 = make_absolute (val, t); - free (t); - cval = sh_canonpath (t1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - } - else -#endif - cval = val; - - if (match && executable_completion ((searching_path ? val : cval), searching_path)) - { - if (cval != val) - free (cval); - free (val); - val = ""; /* So it won't be NULL. */ - return (temp); - } - else - { - if (freetemp) - free (temp); - if (cval != val) - free (cval); - free (val); - goto inner; - } - } -} - -/* Completion inside an unterminated command substitution. */ -static char * -command_subst_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **matches = (char **)NULL; - static const char *orig_start; - static char *filename_text = (char *)NULL; - static int cmd_index, start_len; - char *value; - - if (state == 0) - { - if (filename_text) - free (filename_text); - orig_start = text; - if (*text == '`') - text++; - else if (*text == '$' && text[1] == '(') /* ) */ - text += 2; - /* If the text was quoted, suppress any quote character that the - readline completion code would insert. */ - rl_completion_suppress_quote = 1; - start_len = text - orig_start; - filename_text = savestring (text); - if (matches) - free (matches); - - /* - * At this point we can entertain the idea of re-parsing - * `filename_text' into a (possibly incomplete) command name and - * arguments, and doing completion based on that. This is - * currently very rudimentary, but it is a small improvement. - */ - for (value = filename_text + strlen (filename_text) - 1; value > filename_text; value--) - if (whitespace (*value) || member (*value, COMMAND_SEPARATORS)) - break; - if (value <= filename_text) - matches = rl_completion_matches (filename_text, command_word_completion_function); - else - { - value++; - start_len += value - filename_text; - if (whitespace (value[-1])) - matches = rl_completion_matches (value, rl_filename_completion_function); - else - matches = rl_completion_matches (value, command_word_completion_function); - } - - /* If there is more than one match, rl_completion_matches has already - put the lcd in matches[0]. Skip over it. */ - cmd_index = matches && matches[0] && matches[1]; - - /* If there's a single match and it's a directory, set the append char - to the expected `/'. Otherwise, don't append anything. */ - if (matches && matches[0] && matches[1] == 0 && test_for_directory (matches[0])) - rl_completion_append_character = '/'; - else - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - } - - if (matches == 0 || matches[cmd_index] == 0) - { - rl_filename_quoting_desired = 0; /* disable quoting */ - return ((char *)NULL); - } - else - { - value = (char *)xmalloc (1 + start_len + strlen (matches[cmd_index])); - - if (start_len == 1) - value[0] = *orig_start; - else - strncpy (value, orig_start, start_len); - - strcpy (value + start_len, matches[cmd_index]); - - cmd_index++; - return (value); - } -} - -/* Okay, now we write the entry_function for variable completion. */ -static char * -variable_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **varlist = (char **)NULL; - static int varlist_index; - static char *varname = (char *)NULL; - static int namelen; - static int first_char, first_char_loc; - - if (!state) - { - if (varname) - free (varname); - - first_char_loc = 0; - first_char = text[0]; - - if (first_char == '$') - first_char_loc++; - - if (text[first_char_loc] == '{') - first_char_loc++; - - varname = savestring (text + first_char_loc); - - namelen = strlen (varname); - if (varlist) - strvec_dispose (varlist); - - varlist = all_variables_matching_prefix (varname); - varlist_index = 0; - } - - if (!varlist || !varlist[varlist_index]) - { - return ((char *)NULL); - } - else - { - char *value; - - value = (char *)xmalloc (4 + strlen (varlist[varlist_index])); - - if (first_char_loc) - { - value[0] = first_char; - if (first_char_loc == 2) - value[1] = '{'; - } - - strcpy (value + first_char_loc, varlist[varlist_index]); - if (first_char_loc == 2) - strcat (value, "}"); - - varlist_index++; - return (value); - } -} - -/* How about a completion function for hostnames? */ -static char * -hostname_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **list = (char **)NULL; - static int list_index = 0; - static int first_char, first_char_loc; - - /* If we don't have any state, make some. */ - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (list); - - list = (char **)NULL; - - first_char_loc = 0; - first_char = *text; - - if (first_char == '@') - first_char_loc++; - - list = hostnames_matching ((char *)text+first_char_loc); - list_index = 0; - } - - if (list && list[list_index]) - { - char *t; - - t = (char *)xmalloc (2 + strlen (list[list_index])); - *t = first_char; - strcpy (t + first_char_loc, list[list_index]); - list_index++; - return (t); - } - - return ((char *)NULL); -} - -/* - * A completion function for service names from /etc/services (or wherever). - */ -char * -bash_servicename_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ -#if defined (__WIN32__) || defined (__OPENNT) || !defined (HAVE_GETSERVENT) - return ((char *)NULL); -#else - static char *sname = (char *)NULL; - static struct servent *srvent; - static int snamelen, firstc; - char *value; - char **alist, *aentry; - int afound; - - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (sname); - firstc = *text; - - sname = savestring (text); - snamelen = strlen (sname); - setservent (0); - } - - while (srvent = getservent ()) - { - afound = 0; - if (snamelen == 0 || (STREQN (sname, srvent->s_name, snamelen))) - break; - /* Not primary, check aliases */ - for (alist = srvent->s_aliases; *alist; alist++) - { - aentry = *alist; - if (STREQN (sname, aentry, snamelen)) - { - afound = 1; - break; - } - } - - if (afound) - break; - } - - if (srvent == 0) - { - endservent (); - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - value = afound ? savestring (aentry) : savestring (srvent->s_name); - return value; -#endif -} - -/* - * A completion function for group names from /etc/group (or wherever). - */ -char * -bash_groupname_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ -#if defined (__WIN32__) || defined (__OPENNT) || !defined (HAVE_GRP_H) - return ((char *)NULL); -#else - static char *gname = (char *)NULL; - static struct group *grent; - static int gnamelen; - char *value; - - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (gname); - gname = savestring (text); - gnamelen = strlen (gname); - - setgrent (); - } - - while (grent = getgrent ()) - { - if (gnamelen == 0 || (STREQN (gname, grent->gr_name, gnamelen))) - break; - } - - if (grent == 0) - { - endgrent (); - return ((char *)NULL); - } - - value = savestring (grent->gr_name); - return (value); -#endif -} - -/* Functions to perform history and alias expansions on the current line. */ - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* Perform history expansion on the current line. If no history expansion - is done, pre_process_line() returns what it was passed, so we need to - allocate a new line here. */ -static char * -history_expand_line_internal (line) - char *line; -{ - char *new_line; - int old_verify; - - old_verify = hist_verify; - hist_verify = 0; - new_line = pre_process_line (line, 0, 0); - hist_verify = old_verify; - - return (new_line == line) ? savestring (line) : new_line; -} -#endif - -/* There was an error in expansion. Let the preprocessor print - the error here. */ -static void -cleanup_expansion_error () -{ - char *to_free; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - int old_verify; - - old_verify = hist_verify; - hist_verify = 0; -#endif - - fprintf (rl_outstream, "\r\n"); - to_free = pre_process_line (rl_line_buffer, 1, 0); -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - hist_verify = old_verify; -#endif - if (to_free != rl_line_buffer) - FREE (to_free); - putc ('\r', rl_outstream); - rl_forced_update_display (); -} - -/* If NEW_LINE differs from what is in the readline line buffer, add an - undo record to get from the readline line buffer contents to the new - line and make NEW_LINE the current readline line. */ -static void -maybe_make_readline_line (new_line) - char *new_line; -{ - if (strcmp (new_line, rl_line_buffer) != 0) - { - rl_point = rl_end; - - rl_add_undo (UNDO_BEGIN, 0, 0, 0); - rl_delete_text (0, rl_point); - rl_point = rl_end = rl_mark = 0; - rl_insert_text (new_line); - rl_add_undo (UNDO_END, 0, 0, 0); - } -} - -/* Make NEW_LINE be the current readline line. This frees NEW_LINE. */ -static void -set_up_new_line (new_line) - char *new_line; -{ - int old_point, at_end; - - old_point = rl_point; - at_end = rl_point == rl_end; - - /* If the line was history and alias expanded, then make that - be one thing to undo. */ - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* Place rl_point where we think it should go. */ - if (at_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (old_point < rl_end) - { - rl_point = old_point; - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point])) - rl_forward_word (1, 0); - } -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -/* Expand aliases in the current readline line. */ -static int -alias_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = alias_expand (rl_line_buffer); - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} -#endif - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* History expand the line. */ -static int -history_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} - -/* Expand history substitutions in the current line and then insert a - space (hopefully close to where we were before). */ -static int -tcsh_magic_space (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - int dist_from_end, old_point; - - old_point = rl_point; - dist_from_end = rl_end - rl_point; - if (history_expand_line (count, ignore) == 0) - { - /* Try a simple heuristic from Stephen Gildea . - This works if all expansions were before rl_point or if no expansions - were performed. */ - rl_point = (old_point == 0) ? old_point : rl_end - dist_from_end; - rl_insert (1, ' '); - return (0); - } - else - return (1); -} -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ - -/* History and alias expand the line. */ -static int -history_and_alias_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - - new_line = 0; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); -#endif - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (new_line) - { - char *alias_line; - - alias_line = alias_expand (new_line); - free (new_line); - new_line = alias_line; - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - - if (new_line) - { - set_up_new_line (new_line); - return (0); - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return (1); - } -} - -/* History and alias expand the line, then perform the shell word - expansions by calling expand_string. This can't use set_up_new_line() - because we want the variable expansions as a separate undo'able - set of operations. */ -static int -shell_expand_line (count, ignore) - int count, ignore; -{ - char *new_line; - WORD_LIST *expanded_string; - - new_line = 0; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - new_line = history_expand_line_internal (rl_line_buffer); -#endif - -#if defined (ALIAS) - if (new_line) - { - char *alias_line; - - alias_line = alias_expand (new_line); - free (new_line); - new_line = alias_line; - } -#endif /* ALIAS */ - - if (new_line) - { - int old_point = rl_point; - int at_end = rl_point == rl_end; - - /* If the line was history and alias expanded, then make that - be one thing to undo. */ - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* If there is variable expansion to perform, do that as a separate - operation to be undone. */ - new_line = savestring (rl_line_buffer); - expanded_string = expand_string (new_line, 0); - FREE (new_line); - if (expanded_string == 0) - { - new_line = (char *)xmalloc (1); - new_line[0] = '\0'; - } - else - { - new_line = string_list (expanded_string); - dispose_words (expanded_string); - } - - maybe_make_readline_line (new_line); - free (new_line); - - /* Place rl_point where we think it should go. */ - if (at_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (old_point < rl_end) - { - rl_point = old_point; - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point])) - rl_forward_word (1, 0); - } - return 0; - } - else - { - cleanup_expansion_error (); - return 1; - } -} - -/* If FIGNORE is set, then don't match files with the given suffixes when - completing filenames. If only one of the possibilities has an acceptable - suffix, delete the others, else just return and let the completer - signal an error. It is called by the completer when real - completions are done on filenames by the completer's internal - function, not for completion lists (M-?) and not on "other" - completion types, such as hostnames or commands. */ - -static struct ignorevar fignore = -{ - "FIGNORE", - (struct ign *)0, - 0, - (char *)0, - (sh_iv_item_func_t *) 0, -}; - -static void -_ignore_completion_names (names, name_func) - char **names; - sh_ignore_func_t *name_func; -{ - char **newnames; - int idx, nidx; - char **oldnames; - int oidx; - - /* If there is only one completion, see if it is acceptable. If it is - not, free it up. In any case, short-circuit and return. This is a - special case because names[0] is not the prefix of the list of names - if there is only one completion; it is the completion itself. */ - if (names[1] == (char *)0) - { - if (force_fignore) - if ((*name_func) (names[0]) == 0) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = (char *)NULL; - } - - return; - } - - /* Allocate space for array to hold list of pointers to matching - filenames. The pointers are copied back to NAMES when done. */ - for (nidx = 1; names[nidx]; nidx++) - ; - newnames = strvec_create (nidx + 1); - - if (force_fignore == 0) - { - oldnames = strvec_create (nidx - 1); - oidx = 0; - } - - newnames[0] = names[0]; - for (idx = nidx = 1; names[idx]; idx++) - { - if ((*name_func) (names[idx])) - newnames[nidx++] = names[idx]; - else if (force_fignore == 0) - oldnames[oidx++] = names[idx]; - else - free (names[idx]); - } - - newnames[nidx] = (char *)NULL; - - /* If none are acceptable then let the completer handle it. */ - if (nidx == 1) - { - if (force_fignore) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = (char *)NULL; - } - else - free (oldnames); - - free (newnames); - return; - } - - if (force_fignore == 0) - { - while (oidx) - free (oldnames[--oidx]); - free (oldnames); - } - - /* If only one is acceptable, copy it to names[0] and return. */ - if (nidx == 2) - { - free (names[0]); - names[0] = newnames[1]; - names[1] = (char *)NULL; - free (newnames); - return; - } - - /* Copy the acceptable names back to NAMES, set the new array end, - and return. */ - for (nidx = 1; newnames[nidx]; nidx++) - names[nidx] = newnames[nidx]; - names[nidx] = (char *)NULL; - free (newnames); -} - -static int -name_is_acceptable (name) - const char *name; -{ - struct ign *p; - int nlen; - - for (nlen = strlen (name), p = fignore.ignores; p->val; p++) - { - if (nlen > p->len && p->len > 0 && STREQ (p->val, &name[nlen - p->len])) - return (0); - } - - return (1); -} - -#if 0 -static int -ignore_dot_names (name) - char *name; -{ - return (name[0] != '.'); -} -#endif - -static int -filename_completion_ignore (names) - char **names; -{ -#if 0 - if (glob_dot_filenames == 0) - _ignore_completion_names (names, ignore_dot_names); -#endif - - setup_ignore_patterns (&fignore); - - if (fignore.num_ignores == 0) - return 0; - - _ignore_completion_names (names, name_is_acceptable); - - return 0; -} - -/* Return 1 if NAME is a directory. NAME undergoes tilde expansion. */ -static int -test_for_directory (name) - const char *name; -{ - char *fn; - int r; - - fn = bash_tilde_expand (name, 0); - r = file_isdir (fn); - free (fn); - - return (r); -} - -/* Remove files from NAMES, leaving directories. */ -static int -bash_ignore_filenames (names) - char **names; -{ - _ignore_completion_names (names, test_for_directory); - return 0; -} - -static int -return_zero (name) - const char *name; -{ - return 0; -} - -static int -bash_ignore_everything (names) - char **names; -{ - _ignore_completion_names (names, return_zero); - return 0; -} - -/* Replace a tilde-prefix in VAL with a `~', assuming the user typed it. VAL - is an expanded filename. DIRECTORY_PART is the tilde-prefix portion - of the un-tilde-expanded version of VAL (what the user typed). */ -static char * -restore_tilde (val, directory_part) - char *val, *directory_part; -{ - int l, vl, dl2, xl; - char *dh2, *expdir, *ret; - - vl = strlen (val); - - /* We need to duplicate the expansions readline performs on the directory - portion before passing it to our completion function. */ - dh2 = directory_part ? bash_dequote_filename (directory_part, 0) : 0; - bash_directory_expansion (&dh2); - dl2 = strlen (dh2); - - expdir = bash_tilde_expand (directory_part, 0); - xl = strlen (expdir); - free (expdir); - - /* - dh2 = unexpanded but dequoted tilde-prefix - dl2 = length of tilde-prefix - expdir = tilde-expanded tilde-prefix - xl = length of expanded tilde-prefix - l = length of remainder after tilde-prefix - */ - l = (vl - xl) + 1; - - ret = (char *)xmalloc (dl2 + 2 + l); - strcpy (ret, dh2); - strcpy (ret + dl2, val + xl); - - free (dh2); - return (ret); -} - -/* Simulate the expansions that will be performed by - rl_filename_completion_function. This must be called with the address of - a pointer to malloc'd memory. */ -static void -bash_directory_expansion (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *d, *nd; - - d = savestring (*dirname); - - if ((rl_directory_rewrite_hook) && (*rl_directory_rewrite_hook) (&d)) - { - free (*dirname); - *dirname = d; - } - else if (rl_directory_completion_hook && (*rl_directory_completion_hook) (&d)) - { - free (*dirname); - *dirname = d; - } - else if (rl_completion_found_quote) - { - nd = bash_dequote_filename (d, rl_completion_quote_character); - free (*dirname); - free (d); - *dirname = nd; - } -} - -/* If necessary, rewrite directory entry */ -static char * -bash_filename_rewrite_hook (fname, fnlen) - char *fname; - int fnlen; -{ - char *conv; - - conv = fnx_fromfs (fname, fnlen); - if (conv != fname) - conv = savestring (conv); - return conv; -} - -/* Functions to save and restore the appropriate directory hook */ -/* This is not static so the shopt code can call it */ -void -set_directory_hook () -{ - if (dircomplete_expand) - { - rl_directory_completion_hook = bash_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)0; - } - else - { - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = bash_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_completion_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)0; - } -} - -static rl_icppfunc_t * -save_directory_hook () -{ - rl_icppfunc_t *ret; - - if (dircomplete_expand) - { - ret = rl_directory_completion_hook; - rl_directory_completion_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL; - } - else - { - ret = rl_directory_rewrite_hook; - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = (rl_icppfunc_t *)NULL; - } - - return ret; -} - -static void -restore_directory_hook (hookf) - rl_icppfunc_t *hookf; -{ - if (dircomplete_expand) - rl_directory_completion_hook = hookf; - else - rl_directory_rewrite_hook = hookf; -} - -/* Expand a filename before the readline completion code passes it to stat(2). - The filename will already have had tilde expansion performed. */ -static int -bash_filename_stat_hook (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *local_dirname, *new_dirname, *t; - int should_expand_dirname, return_value; - WORD_LIST *wl; - struct stat sb; - - local_dirname = *dirname; - should_expand_dirname = return_value = 0; - if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '$')) - should_expand_dirname = '$'; - else if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '`')) /* XXX */ - should_expand_dirname = '`'; - -#if defined (HAVE_LSTAT) - if (should_expand_dirname && lstat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#else - if (should_expand_dirname && stat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#endif - should_expand_dirname = 0; - - if (should_expand_dirname) - { - new_dirname = savestring (local_dirname); - wl = expand_prompt_string (new_dirname, 0, W_NOCOMSUB); /* does the right thing */ - if (wl) - { - free (new_dirname); - new_dirname = string_list (wl); - /* Tell the completer we actually expanded something and change - *dirname only if we expanded to something non-null -- stat - behaves unpredictably when passed null or empty strings */ - if (new_dirname && *new_dirname) - { - free (local_dirname); /* XXX */ - local_dirname = *dirname = new_dirname; - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, *dirname) == 0; - } - else - free (new_dirname); - dispose_words (wl); - } - else - free (new_dirname); - } - - /* This is very similar to the code in bash_directory_completion_hook below, - but without spelling correction and not worrying about whether or not - we change relative pathnames. */ - if (no_symbolic_links == 0 && (local_dirname[0] != '.' || local_dirname[1])) - { - char *temp1, *temp2; - - t = get_working_directory ("symlink-hook"); - temp1 = make_absolute (local_dirname, t); - free (t); - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - - /* If we can't canonicalize, bail. */ - if (temp2 == 0) - { - free (temp1); - return return_value; - } - - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = temp2; - free (temp1); - } - - return (return_value); -} - -/* Handle symbolic link references and other directory name - expansions while hacking completion. This should return 1 if it modifies - the DIRNAME argument, 0 otherwise. It should make sure not to modify - DIRNAME if it returns 0. */ -static int -bash_directory_completion_hook (dirname) - char **dirname; -{ - char *local_dirname, *new_dirname, *t; - int return_value, should_expand_dirname, nextch, closer; - WORD_LIST *wl; - struct stat sb; - - return_value = should_expand_dirname = nextch = closer = 0; - local_dirname = *dirname; - - if (t = mbschr (local_dirname, '$')) - { - should_expand_dirname = '$'; - nextch = t[1]; - /* Deliberately does not handle the deprecated $[...] arithmetic - expansion syntax */ - if (nextch == '(') - closer = ')'; - else if (nextch == '{') - closer = '}'; - else - nextch = 0; - } - else if (local_dirname[0] == '~') - should_expand_dirname = '~'; - else - { - t = mbschr (local_dirname, '`'); - if (t && unclosed_pair (local_dirname, strlen (local_dirname), "`") == 0) - should_expand_dirname = '`'; - } - -#if defined (HAVE_LSTAT) - if (should_expand_dirname && lstat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#else - if (should_expand_dirname && stat (local_dirname, &sb) == 0) -#endif - should_expand_dirname = 0; - - if (should_expand_dirname) - { - new_dirname = savestring (local_dirname); - wl = expand_prompt_string (new_dirname, 0, W_NOCOMSUB); /* does the right thing */ - if (wl) - { - *dirname = string_list (wl); - /* Tell the completer to replace the directory name only if we - actually expanded something. */ - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, *dirname) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - free (new_dirname); - dispose_words (wl); - local_dirname = *dirname; - /* XXX - change rl_filename_quote_characters here based on - should_expand_dirname/nextch/closer. This is the only place - custom_filename_quote_characters is modified. */ - if (rl_filename_quote_characters && *rl_filename_quote_characters) - { - int i, j, c; - i = strlen (default_filename_quote_characters); - custom_filename_quote_characters = xrealloc (custom_filename_quote_characters, i+1); - for (i = j = 0; c = default_filename_quote_characters[i]; i++) - { - if (c == should_expand_dirname || c == nextch || c == closer) - continue; - custom_filename_quote_characters[j++] = c; - } - custom_filename_quote_characters[j] = '\0'; - rl_filename_quote_characters = custom_filename_quote_characters; - set_filename_bstab (rl_filename_quote_characters); - } - } - else - { - free (new_dirname); - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = (char *)xmalloc (1); - **dirname = '\0'; - return 1; - } - } - else - { - /* Dequote the filename even if we don't expand it. */ - new_dirname = bash_dequote_filename (local_dirname, rl_completion_quote_character); - return_value = STREQ (local_dirname, new_dirname) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - local_dirname = *dirname = new_dirname; - } - - /* no_symbolic_links == 0 -> use (default) logical view of the file system. - local_dirname[0] == '.' && local_dirname[1] == '/' means files in the - current directory (./). - local_dirname[0] == '.' && local_dirname[1] == 0 means relative pathnames - in the current directory (e.g., lib/sh). - XXX - should we do spelling correction on these? */ - - /* This is test as it was in bash-4.2: skip relative pathnames in current - directory. Change test to - (local_dirname[0] != '.' || (local_dirname[1] && local_dirname[1] != '/')) - if we want to skip paths beginning with ./ also. */ - if (no_symbolic_links == 0 && (local_dirname[0] != '.' || local_dirname[1])) - { - char *temp1, *temp2; - int len1, len2; - - /* If we have a relative path - (local_dirname[0] != '/' && local_dirname[0] != '.') - that is canonical after appending it to the current directory, then - temp1 = temp2+'/' - That is, - strcmp (temp1, temp2) == 0 - after adding a slash to temp2 below. It should be safe to not - change those. - */ - t = get_working_directory ("symlink-hook"); - temp1 = make_absolute (local_dirname, t); - free (t); - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - - /* Try spelling correction if initial canonicalization fails. Make - sure we are set to replace the directory name with the results so - subsequent directory checks don't fail. */ - if (temp2 == 0 && dircomplete_spelling && dircomplete_expand) - { - temp2 = dirspell (temp1); - if (temp2) - { - free (temp1); - temp1 = temp2; - temp2 = sh_canonpath (temp1, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - return_value |= temp2 != 0; - } - } - /* If we can't canonicalize, bail. */ - if (temp2 == 0) - { - free (temp1); - return return_value; - } - len1 = strlen (temp1); - if (temp1[len1 - 1] == '/') - { - len2 = strlen (temp2); - if (len2 > 2) /* don't append `/' to `/' or `//' */ - { - temp2 = (char *)xrealloc (temp2, len2 + 2); - temp2[len2] = '/'; - temp2[len2 + 1] = '\0'; - } - } - - /* dircomplete_expand_relpath == 0 means we want to leave relative - pathnames that are unchanged by canonicalization alone. - *local_dirname != '/' && *local_dirname != '.' == relative pathname - (consistent with general.c:absolute_pathname()) - temp1 == temp2 (after appending a slash to temp2) means the pathname - is not changed by canonicalization as described above. */ - if (dircomplete_expand_relpath || ((local_dirname[0] != '/' && local_dirname[0] != '.') && STREQ (temp1, temp2) == 0)) - return_value |= STREQ (local_dirname, temp2) == 0; - free (local_dirname); - *dirname = temp2; - free (temp1); - } - - return (return_value); -} - -static char **history_completion_array = (char **)NULL; -static int harry_size; -static int harry_len; - -static void -build_history_completion_array () -{ - register int i, j; - HIST_ENTRY **hlist; - char **tokens; - - /* First, clear out the current dynamic history completion list. */ - if (harry_size) - { - strvec_dispose (history_completion_array); - history_completion_array = (char **)NULL; - harry_size = 0; - harry_len = 0; - } - - /* Next, grovel each line of history, making each shell-sized token - a separate entry in the history_completion_array. */ - hlist = history_list (); - - if (hlist) - { - for (i = 0; hlist[i]; i++) - ; - for ( --i; i >= 0; i--) - { - /* Separate each token, and place into an array. */ - tokens = history_tokenize (hlist[i]->line); - - for (j = 0; tokens && tokens[j]; j++) - { - if (harry_len + 2 > harry_size) - history_completion_array = strvec_resize (history_completion_array, harry_size += 10); - - history_completion_array[harry_len++] = tokens[j]; - history_completion_array[harry_len] = (char *)NULL; - } - free (tokens); - } - - /* Sort the complete list of tokens. */ - if (dabbrev_expand_active == 0) - qsort (history_completion_array, harry_len, sizeof (char *), (QSFUNC *)strvec_strcmp); - } -} - -static char * -history_completion_generator (hint_text, state) - const char *hint_text; - int state; -{ - static int local_index, len; - static const char *text; - - /* If this is the first call to the generator, then initialize the - list of strings to complete over. */ - if (state == 0) - { - if (dabbrev_expand_active) /* This is kind of messy */ - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - local_index = 0; - build_history_completion_array (); - text = hint_text; - len = strlen (text); - } - - while (history_completion_array && history_completion_array[local_index]) - { - if (strncmp (text, history_completion_array[local_index++], len) == 0) - return (savestring (history_completion_array[local_index - 1])); - } - return ((char *)NULL); -} - -static int -dynamic_complete_history (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r; - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - - rl_completion_entry_function = history_completion_generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - - /* XXX - use rl_completion_mode here? */ - if (rl_last_func == dynamic_complete_history) - r = rl_complete_internal ('?'); - else - r = rl_complete_internal (TAB); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - return r; -} - -static int -bash_dabbrev_expand (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r, orig_suppress, orig_sort; - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - - orig_func = rl_menu_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - orig_suppress = rl_completion_suppress_append; - orig_sort = rl_sort_completion_matches; - - rl_menu_completion_entry_function = history_completion_generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - rl_completion_suppress_append = 1; - rl_sort_completion_matches = 0; - - /* XXX - use rl_completion_mode here? */ - dabbrev_expand_active = 1; - if (rl_last_func == bash_dabbrev_expand) - rl_last_func = rl_menu_complete; - r = rl_menu_complete (count, key); - dabbrev_expand_active = 0; - - rl_last_func = bash_dabbrev_expand; - rl_menu_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - rl_completion_suppress_append = orig_suppress; - rl_sort_completion_matches = orig_sort; - - return r; -} - -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) -static int -bash_complete_username (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_username_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_username)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_username_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_username_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_username_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, rl_username_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_filename (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_filename_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_filename)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_filename_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_filename_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_filename_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_icppfunc_t *orig_dir_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - /*const*/ char *orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters; - int r; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters = rl_completer_word_break_characters; - - orig_dir_func = save_directory_hook (); - - rl_completion_entry_function = rl_filename_completion_function; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = filename_completion_ignore; - rl_completer_word_break_characters = " \t\n\"\'"; - - r = rl_complete_internal (what_to_do); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - rl_completer_word_break_characters = orig_rl_completer_word_break_characters; - - restore_directory_hook (orig_dir_func); - - return r; -} - -static int -bash_complete_hostname (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_hostname_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_hostname)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_hostname_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_hostname_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_variable (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_variable_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_variable)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_variable_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_variable_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_command (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_command_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_complete_command)); -} - -static int -bash_possible_command_completions (ignore, ignore2) - int ignore, ignore2; -{ - return bash_complete_command_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_complete_hostname_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, hostname_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_variable_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, variable_completion_function); -} - -static int -bash_complete_command_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, command_word_completion_function); -} - -static char *globtext; -static char *globorig; - -static char * -glob_complete_word (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char **matches = (char **)NULL; - static int ind; - int glen; - char *ret, *ttext; - - if (state == 0) - { - rl_filename_completion_desired = 1; - FREE (matches); - if (globorig != globtext) - FREE (globorig); - FREE (globtext); - - ttext = bash_tilde_expand (text, 0); - - if (rl_explicit_arg) - { - globorig = savestring (ttext); - glen = strlen (ttext); - globtext = (char *)xmalloc (glen + 2); - strcpy (globtext, ttext); - globtext[glen] = '*'; - globtext[glen+1] = '\0'; - } - else - globtext = globorig = savestring (ttext); - - if (ttext != text) - free (ttext); - - matches = shell_glob_filename (globtext); - if (GLOB_FAILED (matches)) - matches = (char **)NULL; - ind = 0; - } - - ret = matches ? matches[ind] : (char *)NULL; - ind++; - return ret; -} - -static int -bash_glob_completion_internal (what_to_do) - int what_to_do; -{ - return bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, glob_complete_word); -} - -/* A special quoting function so we don't end up quoting globbing characters - in the word if there are no matches or multiple matches. */ -static char * -bash_glob_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp) - char *s; - int rtype; - char *qcp; -{ - if (globorig && qcp && *qcp == '\0' && STREQ (s, globorig)) - return (savestring (s)); - else - return (bash_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp)); -} - -static int -bash_glob_complete_word (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - int r; - rl_quote_func_t *orig_quoting_function; - - if (rl_editing_mode == EMACS_EDITING_MODE) - rl_explicit_arg = 1; /* force `*' append */ - orig_quoting_function = rl_filename_quoting_function; - rl_filename_quoting_function = bash_glob_quote_filename; - - r = bash_glob_completion_internal (rl_completion_mode (bash_glob_complete_word)); - - rl_filename_quoting_function = orig_quoting_function; - return r; -} - -static int -bash_glob_expand_word (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return bash_glob_completion_internal ('*'); -} - -static int -bash_glob_list_expansions (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return bash_glob_completion_internal ('?'); -} - -static int -bash_specific_completion (what_to_do, generator) - int what_to_do; - rl_compentry_func_t *generator; -{ - rl_compentry_func_t *orig_func; - rl_completion_func_t *orig_attempt_func; - rl_compignore_func_t *orig_ignore_func; - int r; - - orig_func = rl_completion_entry_function; - orig_attempt_func = rl_attempted_completion_function; - orig_ignore_func = rl_ignore_some_completions_function; - rl_completion_entry_function = generator; - rl_attempted_completion_function = NULL; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - r = rl_complete_internal (what_to_do); - - rl_completion_entry_function = orig_func; - rl_attempted_completion_function = orig_attempt_func; - rl_ignore_some_completions_function = orig_ignore_func; - - return r; -} - -#endif /* SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ - -#if defined (VI_MODE) -/* Completion, from vi mode's point of view. This is a modified version of - rl_vi_complete which uses the bash globbing code to implement what POSIX - specifies, which is to append a `*' and attempt filename generation (which - has the side effect of expanding any globbing characters in the word). */ -static int -bash_vi_complete (count, key) - int count, key; -{ -#if defined (SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS) - int p, r; - char *t; - - if ((rl_point < rl_end) && (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point]))) - { - if (!whitespace (rl_line_buffer[rl_point + 1])) - rl_vi_end_word (1, 'E'); - rl_point++; - } - - /* Find boundaries of current word, according to vi definition of a - `bigword'. */ - t = 0; - if (rl_point > 0) - { - p = rl_point; - rl_vi_bWord (1, 'B'); - r = rl_point; - rl_point = p; - p = r; - - t = substring (rl_line_buffer, p, rl_point); - } - - if (t && glob_pattern_p (t) == 0) - rl_explicit_arg = 1; /* XXX - force glob_complete_word to append `*' */ - FREE (t); - - if (key == '*') /* Expansion and replacement. */ - r = bash_glob_expand_word (count, key); - else if (key == '=') /* List possible completions. */ - r = bash_glob_list_expansions (count, key); - else if (key == '\\') /* Standard completion */ - r = bash_glob_complete_word (count, key); - else - r = rl_complete (0, key); - - if (key == '*' || key == '\\') - rl_vi_start_inserting (key, 1, 1); - - return (r); -#else - return rl_vi_complete (count, key); -#endif /* !SPECIFIC_COMPLETION_FUNCTIONS */ -} -#endif /* VI_MODE */ - -/* Filename quoting for completion. */ -/* A function to strip unquoted quote characters (single quotes, double - quotes, and backslashes). It allows single quotes to appear - within double quotes, and vice versa. It should be smarter. */ -static char * -bash_dequote_filename (text, quote_char) - char *text; - int quote_char; -{ - char *ret, *p, *r; - int l, quoted; - - l = strlen (text); - ret = (char *)xmalloc (l + 1); - for (quoted = quote_char, p = text, r = ret; p && *p; p++) - { - /* Allow backslash-escaped characters to pass through unscathed. */ - if (*p == '\\') - { - /* Backslashes are preserved within single quotes. */ - if (quoted == '\'') - *r++ = *p; - /* Backslashes are preserved within double quotes unless the - character is one that is defined to be escaped */ - else if (quoted == '"' && ((sh_syntaxtab[p[1]] & CBSDQUOTE) == 0)) - *r++ = *p; - - *r++ = *++p; - if (*p == '\0') - return ret; /* XXX - was break; */ - continue; - } - /* Close quote. */ - if (quoted && *p == quoted) - { - quoted = 0; - continue; - } - /* Open quote. */ - if (quoted == 0 && (*p == '\'' || *p == '"')) - { - quoted = *p; - continue; - } - *r++ = *p; - } - *r = '\0'; - return ret; -} - -/* Quote characters that the readline completion code would treat as - word break characters with backslashes. Pass backslash-quoted - characters through without examination. */ -static char * -quote_word_break_chars (text) - char *text; -{ - char *ret, *r, *s; - int l; - - l = strlen (text); - ret = (char *)xmalloc ((2 * l) + 1); - for (s = text, r = ret; *s; s++) - { - /* Pass backslash-quoted characters through, including the backslash. */ - if (*s == '\\') - { - *r++ = '\\'; - *r++ = *++s; - if (*s == '\0') - break; - continue; - } - /* OK, we have an unquoted character. Check its presence in - rl_completer_word_break_characters. */ - if (mbschr (rl_completer_word_break_characters, *s)) - *r++ = '\\'; - /* XXX -- check for standalone tildes here and backslash-quote them */ - if (s == text && *s == '~' && file_exists (text)) - *r++ = '\\'; - *r++ = *s; - } - *r = '\0'; - return ret; -} - -/* Use characters in STRING to populate the table of characters that should - be backslash-quoted. The table will be used for sh_backslash_quote from - this file. */ -static void -set_filename_bstab (string) - const char *string; -{ - const char *s; - - memset (filename_bstab, 0, sizeof (filename_bstab)); - for (s = string; s && *s; s++) - filename_bstab[*s] = 1; -} - -/* Quote a filename using double quotes, single quotes, or backslashes - depending on the value of completion_quoting_style. If we're - completing using backslashes, we need to quote some additional - characters (those that readline treats as word breaks), so we call - quote_word_break_chars on the result. This returns newly-allocated - memory. */ -static char * -bash_quote_filename (s, rtype, qcp) - char *s; - int rtype; - char *qcp; -{ - char *rtext, *mtext, *ret; - int rlen, cs; - - rtext = (char *)NULL; - - /* If RTYPE == MULT_MATCH, it means that there is - more than one match. In this case, we do not add - the closing quote or attempt to perform tilde - expansion. If RTYPE == SINGLE_MATCH, we try - to perform tilde expansion, because single and double - quotes inhibit tilde expansion by the shell. */ - - cs = completion_quoting_style; - /* Might need to modify the default completion style based on *qcp, - since it's set to any user-provided opening quote. We also change - to single-quoting if there is no user-provided opening quote and - the word being completed contains newlines, since those are not - quoted correctly using backslashes (a backslash-newline pair is - special to the shell parser). */ - if (*qcp == '\0' && cs == COMPLETE_BSQUOTE && mbschr (s, '\n')) - cs = COMPLETE_SQUOTE; - else if (*qcp == '"') - cs = COMPLETE_DQUOTE; - else if (*qcp == '\'') - cs = COMPLETE_SQUOTE; -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) - else if (*qcp == '\0' && history_expansion && cs == COMPLETE_DQUOTE && - history_expansion_inhibited == 0 && mbschr (s, '!')) - cs = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - - if (*qcp == '"' && history_expansion && cs == COMPLETE_DQUOTE && - history_expansion_inhibited == 0 && mbschr (s, '!')) - { - cs = COMPLETE_BSQUOTE; - *qcp = '\0'; - } -#endif - - /* Don't tilde-expand backslash-quoted filenames, since only single and - double quotes inhibit tilde expansion. */ - mtext = s; - if (mtext[0] == '~' && rtype == SINGLE_MATCH && cs != COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - mtext = bash_tilde_expand (s, 0); - - switch (cs) - { - case COMPLETE_DQUOTE: - rtext = sh_double_quote (mtext); - break; - case COMPLETE_SQUOTE: - rtext = sh_single_quote (mtext); - break; - case COMPLETE_BSQUOTE: - rtext = sh_backslash_quote (mtext, complete_fullquote ? 0 : filename_bstab, 0); - break; - } - - if (mtext != s) - free (mtext); - - /* We may need to quote additional characters: those that readline treats - as word breaks that are not quoted by backslash_quote. */ - if (rtext && cs == COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - { - mtext = quote_word_break_chars (rtext); - free (rtext); - rtext = mtext; - } - - /* Leave the opening quote intact. The readline completion code takes - care of avoiding doubled opening quotes. */ - if (rtext) - { - rlen = strlen (rtext); - ret = (char *)xmalloc (rlen + 1); - strcpy (ret, rtext); - } - else - { - ret = (char *)xmalloc (rlen = 1); - ret[0] = '\0'; - } - - /* If there are multiple matches, cut off the closing quote. */ - if (rtype == MULT_MATCH && cs != COMPLETE_BSQUOTE) - ret[rlen - 1] = '\0'; - free (rtext); - return ret; -} - -/* Support for binding readline key sequences to Unix commands. */ -static Keymap cmd_xmap; - -#ifdef _MINIX -static void -#else -static int -#endif -putx(c) - int c; -{ - int x; - x = putc (c, rl_outstream); -#ifndef _MINIX - return x; -#endif -} - -static int -bash_execute_unix_command (count, key) - int count; /* ignored */ - int key; -{ - Keymap ckmap; /* current keymap */ - Keymap xkmap; /* unix command executing keymap */ - rl_command_func_t *func; - int type; - register int i, r; - intmax_t mi; - sh_parser_state_t ps; - char *cmd, *value, *l, *l1, *ce; - SHELL_VAR *v; - char ibuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - /* First, we need to find the right command to execute. This is tricky, - because we might have already indirected into another keymap, so we - have to walk cmd_xmap using the entire key sequence. */ - cmd = (char *)rl_function_of_keyseq (rl_executing_keyseq, cmd_xmap, &type); - - if (cmd == 0 || type != ISMACR) - { - rl_crlf (); - internal_error (_("bash_execute_unix_command: cannot find keymap for command")); - rl_forced_update_display (); - return 1; - } - - ce = rl_get_termcap ("ce"); - if (ce) /* clear current line */ - { - fprintf (rl_outstream, "\r"); - tputs (ce, 1, putx); - fflush (rl_outstream); - } - else - rl_crlf (); /* move to a new line */ - - v = bind_variable ("READLINE_LINE", rl_line_buffer, 0); - if (v) - VSETATTR (v, att_exported); - l = v ? value_cell (v) : 0; - value = inttostr (rl_point, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf)); - v = bind_int_variable ("READLINE_POINT", value); - if (v) - VSETATTR (v, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - - save_parser_state (&ps); - r = parse_and_execute (cmd, "bash_execute_unix_command", SEVAL_NOHIST|SEVAL_NOFREE); - restore_parser_state (&ps); - - v = find_variable ("READLINE_LINE"); - l1 = v ? value_cell (v) : 0; - if (l1 != l) - maybe_make_readline_line (value_cell (v)); - v = find_variable ("READLINE_POINT"); - if (v && legal_number (value_cell (v), &mi)) - { - i = mi; - if (i != rl_point) - { - rl_point = i; - if (rl_point > rl_end) - rl_point = rl_end; - else if (rl_point < 0) - rl_point = 0; - } - } - - unbind_variable ("READLINE_LINE"); - unbind_variable ("READLINE_POINT"); - array_needs_making = 1; - - /* and restore the readline buffer and display after command execution. */ - rl_forced_update_display (); - return 0; -} - -int -print_unix_command_map () -{ - Keymap save; - - save = rl_get_keymap (); - rl_set_keymap (cmd_xmap); - rl_macro_dumper (1); - rl_set_keymap (save); - return 0; -} - -static void -init_unix_command_map () -{ - cmd_xmap = rl_make_bare_keymap (); -} - -static int -isolate_sequence (string, ind, need_dquote, startp) - char *string; - int ind, need_dquote, *startp; -{ - register int i; - int c, passc, delim; - - for (i = ind; string[i] && whitespace (string[i]); i++) - ; - /* NEED_DQUOTE means that the first non-white character *must* be `"'. */ - if (need_dquote && string[i] != '"') - { - builtin_error (_("%s: first non-whitespace character is not `\"'"), string); - return -1; - } - - /* We can have delimited strings even if NEED_DQUOTE == 0, like the command - string to bind the key sequence to. */ - delim = (string[i] == '"' || string[i] == '\'') ? string[i] : 0; - - if (startp) - *startp = delim ? ++i : i; - - for (passc = 0; c = string[i]; i++) - { - if (passc) - { - passc = 0; - continue; - } - if (c == '\\') - { - passc++; - continue; - } - if (c == delim) - break; - } - - if (delim && string[i] != delim) - { - builtin_error (_("no closing `%c' in %s"), delim, string); - return -1; - } - - return i; -} - -int -bind_keyseq_to_unix_command (line) - char *line; -{ - Keymap kmap; - char *kseq, *value; - int i, kstart; - - if (cmd_xmap == 0) - init_unix_command_map (); - - kmap = rl_get_keymap (); - - /* We duplicate some of the work done by rl_parse_and_bind here, but - this code only has to handle `"keyseq": ["]command["]' and can - generate an error for anything else. */ - i = isolate_sequence (line, 0, 1, &kstart); - if (i < 0) - return -1; - - /* Create the key sequence string to pass to rl_generic_bind */ - kseq = substring (line, kstart, i); - - for ( ; line[i] && line[i] != ':'; i++) - ; - if (line[i] != ':') - { - builtin_error (_("%s: missing colon separator"), line); - FREE (kseq); - return -1; - } - - i = isolate_sequence (line, i + 1, 0, &kstart); - if (i < 0) - { - FREE (kseq); - return -1; - } - - /* Create the value string containing the command to execute. */ - value = substring (line, kstart, i); - - /* Save the command to execute and the key sequence in the CMD_XMAP */ - rl_generic_bind (ISMACR, kseq, value, cmd_xmap); - - /* and bind the key sequence in the current keymap to a function that - understands how to execute from CMD_XMAP */ - rl_bind_keyseq_in_map (kseq, bash_execute_unix_command, kmap); - - free (kseq); - return 0; -} - -/* Used by the programmable completion code. Complete TEXT as a filename, - but return only directories as matches. Dequotes the filename before - attempting to find matches. */ -char ** -bash_directory_completion_matches (text) - const char *text; -{ - char **m1; - char *dfn; - int qc; - - qc = rl_dispatching ? rl_completion_quote_character : 0; - dfn = bash_dequote_filename ((char *)text, qc); - m1 = rl_completion_matches (dfn, rl_filename_completion_function); - free (dfn); - - if (m1 == 0 || m1[0] == 0) - return m1; - /* We don't bother recomputing the lcd of the matches, because it will just - get thrown away by the programmable completion code and recomputed - later. */ - (void)bash_ignore_filenames (m1); - return m1; -} - -char * -bash_dequote_text (text) - const char *text; -{ - char *dtxt; - int qc; - - qc = (text[0] == '"' || text[0] == '\'') ? text[0] : 0; - dtxt = bash_dequote_filename ((char *)text, qc); - return (dtxt); -} - -/* This event hook is designed to be called after readline receives a signal - that interrupts read(2). It gives reasonable responsiveness to interrupts - and fatal signals without executing too much code in a signal handler - context. */ -static int -bash_event_hook () -{ - /* If we're going to longjmp to top_level, make sure we clean up readline */ - if (interrupt_state && signal_is_trapped (SIGINT) == 0) - rl_cleanup_after_signal (); - - bashline_reset_event_hook (); - check_signals_and_traps (); /* XXX */ -} - -#endif /* READLINE */ diff --git a/builtins/read.def~ b/builtins/read.def~ deleted file mode 100644 index e5c927aab..000000000 --- a/builtins/read.def~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1091 +0,0 @@ -This file is read.def, from which is created read.c. -It implements the builtin "read" in Bash. - -Copyright (C) 1987-2012 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . - -$PRODUCES read.c - -$BUILTIN read -$FUNCTION read_builtin -$SHORT_DOC read [-ers] [-a array] [-d delim] [-i text] [-n nchars] [-N nchars] [-p prompt] [-t timeout] [-u fd] [name ...] -Read a line from the standard input and split it into fields. - -Reads a single line from the standard input, or from file descriptor FD -if the -u option is supplied. The line is split into fields as with word -splitting, and the first word is assigned to the first NAME, the second -word to the second NAME, and so on, with any leftover words assigned to -the last NAME. Only the characters found in $IFS are recognized as word -delimiters. - -If no NAMEs are supplied, the line read is stored in the REPLY variable. - -Options: - -a array assign the words read to sequential indices of the array - variable ARRAY, starting at zero - -d delim continue until the first character of DELIM is read, rather - than newline - -e use Readline to obtain the line in an interactive shell - -i text Use TEXT as the initial text for Readline - -n nchars return after reading NCHARS characters rather than waiting - for a newline, but honor a delimiter if fewer than NCHARS - characters are read before the delimiter - -N nchars return only after reading exactly NCHARS characters, unless - EOF is encountered or read times out, ignoring any delimiter - -p prompt output the string PROMPT without a trailing newline before - attempting to read - -r do not allow backslashes to escape any characters - -s do not echo input coming from a terminal - -t timeout time out and return failure if a complete line of input is - not read within TIMEOUT seconds. The value of the TMOUT - variable is the default timeout. TIMEOUT may be a - fractional number. If TIMEOUT is 0, read returns immediately, - without trying to read any data, returning success only if - input is available on the specified file descriptor. The - exit status is greater than 128 if the timeout is exceeded - -u fd read from file descriptor FD instead of the standard input - -Exit Status: -The return code is zero, unless end-of-file is encountered, read times out -(in which case it's greater than 128), a variable assignment error occurs, -or an invalid file descriptor is supplied as the argument to -u. -$END - -#include - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" - -#include - -#include "bashansi.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#include -#include - -#ifdef __CYGWIN__ -# include -# include -#endif - -#include "../bashintl.h" - -#include "../shell.h" -#include "common.h" -#include "bashgetopt.h" - -#include - -#if defined (READLINE) -#include "../bashline.h" -#include -#endif - -#if defined (BUFFERED_INPUT) -# include "input.h" -#endif - -#include "shmbutil.h" - -#if !defined(errno) -extern int errno; -#endif - -extern void run_pending_traps __P((void)); - -extern int posixly_correct; -extern int trapped_signal_received; - -struct ttsave -{ - int fd; - TTYSTRUCT *attrs; -}; - -#if defined (READLINE) -static void reset_attempted_completion_function __P((char *)); -static int set_itext __P((void)); -static char *edit_line __P((char *, char *)); -static void set_eol_delim __P((int)); -static void reset_eol_delim __P((char *)); -#endif -static SHELL_VAR *bind_read_variable __P((char *, char *)); -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) -static int read_mbchar __P((int, char *, int, int, int)); -#endif -static void ttyrestore __P((struct ttsave *)); - -static sighandler sigalrm __P((int)); -static void reset_alarm __P((void)); - -/* Try this to see what the rest of the shell can do with the information. */ -procenv_t alrmbuf; -int sigalrm_seen; - -static int reading; -static SigHandler *old_alrm; -static unsigned char delim; - -/* In all cases, SIGALRM just sets a flag that we check periodically. This - avoids problems with the semi-tricky stuff we do with the xfree of - input_string at the top of the unwind-protect list (see below). */ - -/* Set a flag that CHECK_ALRM can check. This relies on zread calling - trap.c:check_signals_and_traps(), which knows about sigalrm_seen and - alrmbuf. */ -static sighandler -sigalrm (s) - int s; -{ - sigalrm_seen = 1; -} - -static void -reset_alarm () -{ - set_signal_handler (SIGALRM, old_alrm); - falarm (0, 0); -} - -/* Read the value of the shell variables whose names follow. - The reading is done from the current input stream, whatever - that may be. Successive words of the input line are assigned - to the variables mentioned in LIST. The last variable in LIST - gets the remainder of the words on the line. If no variables - are mentioned in LIST, then the default variable is $REPLY. */ -int -read_builtin (list) - WORD_LIST *list; -{ - register char *varname; - int size, i, nr, pass_next, saw_escape, eof, opt, retval, code, print_ps2; - int input_is_tty, input_is_pipe, unbuffered_read, skip_ctlesc, skip_ctlnul; - int raw, edit, nchars, silent, have_timeout, ignore_delim, fd, lastsig, t_errno; - unsigned int tmsec, tmusec; - long ival, uval; - intmax_t intval; - char c; - char *input_string, *orig_input_string, *ifs_chars, *prompt, *arrayname; - char *e, *t, *t1, *ps2, *tofree; - struct stat tsb; - SHELL_VAR *var; - TTYSTRUCT ttattrs, ttset; - struct ttsave termsave; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - WORD_LIST *alist; -#endif -#if defined (READLINE) - char *rlbuf, *itext; - int rlind; -#endif - - USE_VAR(size); - USE_VAR(i); - USE_VAR(pass_next); - USE_VAR(print_ps2); - USE_VAR(saw_escape); - USE_VAR(input_is_pipe); -/* USE_VAR(raw); */ - USE_VAR(edit); - USE_VAR(tmsec); - USE_VAR(tmusec); - USE_VAR(nchars); - USE_VAR(silent); - USE_VAR(ifs_chars); - USE_VAR(prompt); - USE_VAR(arrayname); -#if defined (READLINE) - USE_VAR(rlbuf); - USE_VAR(rlind); - USE_VAR(itext); -#endif - USE_VAR(list); - USE_VAR(ps2); - USE_VAR(lastsig); - - sigalrm_seen = reading = 0; - - i = 0; /* Index into the string that we are reading. */ - raw = edit = 0; /* Not reading raw input by default. */ - silent = 0; - arrayname = prompt = (char *)NULL; - fd = 0; /* file descriptor to read from */ - -#if defined (READLINE) - rlbuf = itext = (char *)0; - rlind = 0; -#endif - - tmsec = tmusec = 0; /* no timeout */ - nr = nchars = input_is_tty = input_is_pipe = unbuffered_read = have_timeout = 0; - delim = '\n'; /* read until newline */ - ignore_delim = 0; - - reset_internal_getopt (); - while ((opt = internal_getopt (list, "ersa:d:i:n:p:t:u:N:")) != -1) - { - switch (opt) - { - case 'r': - raw = 1; - break; - case 'p': - prompt = list_optarg; - break; - case 's': - silent = 1; - break; - case 'e': -#if defined (READLINE) - edit = 1; -#endif - break; - case 'i': -#if defined (READLINE) - itext = list_optarg; -#endif - break; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - case 'a': - arrayname = list_optarg; - break; -#endif - case 't': - code = uconvert (list_optarg, &ival, &uval); - if (code == 0 || ival < 0 || uval < 0) - { - builtin_error (_("%s: invalid timeout specification"), list_optarg); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - else - { - have_timeout = 1; - tmsec = ival; - tmusec = uval; - } - break; - case 'N': - ignore_delim = 1; - delim = -1; - case 'n': - code = legal_number (list_optarg, &intval); - if (code == 0 || intval < 0 || intval != (int)intval) - { - sh_invalidnum (list_optarg); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - else - nchars = intval; - break; - case 'u': - code = legal_number (list_optarg, &intval); - if (code == 0 || intval < 0 || intval != (int)intval) - { - builtin_error (_("%s: invalid file descriptor specification"), list_optarg); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - else - fd = intval; - if (sh_validfd (fd) == 0) - { - builtin_error (_("%d: invalid file descriptor: %s"), fd, strerror (errno)); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - break; - case 'd': - delim = *list_optarg; - break; - default: - builtin_usage (); - return (EX_USAGE); - } - } - list = loptend; - - /* `read -t 0 var' tests whether input is available with select/FIONREAD, - and fails if those are unavailable */ - if (have_timeout && tmsec == 0 && tmusec == 0) -#if 0 - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); -#else - return (input_avail (fd) ? EXECUTION_SUCCESS : EXECUTION_FAILURE); -#endif - - /* Convenience: check early whether or not the first of possibly several - variable names is a valid identifier, and bail early if so. */ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (list && legal_identifier (list->word->word) == 0 && valid_array_reference (list->word->word) == 0) -#else - if (list && legal_identifier (list->word->word) == 0) -#endif - { - sh_invalidid (list->word->word); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - - /* If we're asked to ignore the delimiter, make sure we do. */ - if (ignore_delim) - delim = -1; - - /* IF IFS is unset, we use the default of " \t\n". */ - ifs_chars = getifs (); - if (ifs_chars == 0) /* XXX - shouldn't happen */ - ifs_chars = ""; - /* If we want to read exactly NCHARS chars, don't split on IFS */ - if (ignore_delim) - ifs_chars = ""; - for (skip_ctlesc = skip_ctlnul = 0, e = ifs_chars; *e; e++) - skip_ctlesc |= *e == CTLESC, skip_ctlnul |= *e == CTLNUL; - - input_string = (char *)xmalloc (size = 112); /* XXX was 128 */ - input_string[0] = '\0'; - - /* $TMOUT, if set, is the default timeout for read. */ - if (have_timeout == 0 && (e = get_string_value ("TMOUT"))) - { - code = uconvert (e, &ival, &uval); - if (code == 0 || ival < 0 || uval < 0) - tmsec = tmusec = 0; - else - { - tmsec = ival; - tmusec = uval; - } - } - - begin_unwind_frame ("read_builtin"); - -#if defined (BUFFERED_INPUT) - if (interactive == 0 && default_buffered_input >= 0 && fd_is_bash_input (fd)) - sync_buffered_stream (default_buffered_input); -#endif - - input_is_tty = isatty (fd); - if (input_is_tty == 0) -#ifndef __CYGWIN__ - input_is_pipe = (lseek (fd, 0L, SEEK_CUR) < 0) && (errno == ESPIPE); -#else - input_is_pipe = 1; -#endif - - /* If the -p, -e or -s flags were given, but input is not coming from the - terminal, turn them off. */ - if ((prompt || edit || silent) && input_is_tty == 0) - { - prompt = (char *)NULL; -#if defined (READLINE) - itext = (char *)NULL; -#endif - edit = silent = 0; - } - -#if defined (READLINE) - if (edit) - add_unwind_protect (xfree, rlbuf); -#endif - - pass_next = 0; /* Non-zero signifies last char was backslash. */ - saw_escape = 0; /* Non-zero signifies that we saw an escape char */ - - if (tmsec > 0 || tmusec > 0) - { - /* Turn off the timeout if stdin is a regular file (e.g. from - input redirection). */ - if ((fstat (fd, &tsb) < 0) || S_ISREG (tsb.st_mode)) - tmsec = tmusec = 0; - } - - if (tmsec > 0 || tmusec > 0) - { - code = setjmp_nosigs (alrmbuf); - if (code) - { - sigalrm_seen = 0; - /* Tricky. The top of the unwind-protect stack is the free of - input_string. We want to run all the rest and use input_string, - so we have to save input_string temporarily, run the unwind- - protects, then restore input_string so we can use it later */ - orig_input_string = 0; - input_string[i] = '\0'; /* make sure it's terminated */ - if (i == 0) - { - t = (char *)xmalloc (1); - t[0] = 0; - } - else - t = savestring (input_string); - - run_unwind_frame ("read_builtin"); - input_string = t; - retval = 128+SIGALRM; - goto assign_vars; - } - old_alrm = set_signal_handler (SIGALRM, sigalrm); - add_unwind_protect (reset_alarm, (char *)NULL); -#if defined (READLINE) - if (edit) - add_unwind_protect (reset_attempted_completion_function, (char *)NULL); -#endif - falarm (tmsec, tmusec); - } - - /* If we've been asked to read only NCHARS chars, or we're using some - character other than newline to terminate the line, do the right - thing to readline or the tty. */ - if (nchars > 0 || delim != '\n') - { -#if defined (READLINE) - if (edit) - { - if (nchars > 0) - { - unwind_protect_int (rl_num_chars_to_read); - rl_num_chars_to_read = nchars; - } - if (delim != '\n') - { - set_eol_delim (delim); - add_unwind_protect (reset_eol_delim, (char *)NULL); - } - } - else -#endif - if (input_is_tty) - { - /* ttsave() */ - termsave.fd = fd; - ttgetattr (fd, &ttattrs); - termsave.attrs = &ttattrs; - - ttset = ttattrs; - i = silent ? ttfd_cbreak (fd, &ttset) : ttfd_onechar (fd, &ttset); - if (i < 0) - sh_ttyerror (1); - add_unwind_protect ((Function *)ttyrestore, (char *)&termsave); - } - } - else if (silent) /* turn off echo but leave term in canonical mode */ - { - /* ttsave (); */ - termsave.fd = fd; - ttgetattr (fd, &ttattrs); - termsave.attrs = &ttattrs; - - ttset = ttattrs; - i = ttfd_noecho (fd, &ttset); /* ttnoecho (); */ - if (i < 0) - sh_ttyerror (1); - - add_unwind_protect ((Function *)ttyrestore, (char *)&termsave); - } - - /* This *must* be the top unwind-protect on the stack, so the manipulation - of the unwind-protect stack after the realloc() works right. */ - add_unwind_protect (xfree, input_string); - - CHECK_ALRM; - if ((nchars > 0) && (input_is_tty == 0) && ignore_delim) /* read -N */ - unbuffered_read = 2; - else if ((nchars > 0) || (delim != '\n') || input_is_pipe) - unbuffered_read = 1; - - if (prompt && edit == 0) - { - fprintf (stderr, "%s", prompt); - fflush (stderr); - } - -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) && defined (O_TEXT) - setmode (0, O_TEXT); -#endif - - ps2 = 0; - for (print_ps2 = eof = retval = 0;;) - { - CHECK_ALRM; - -#if defined (READLINE) - if (edit) - { - if (rlbuf && rlbuf[rlind] == '\0') - { - xfree (rlbuf); - rlbuf = (char *)0; - } - if (rlbuf == 0) - { - reading = 1; - rlbuf = edit_line (prompt ? prompt : "", itext); - reading = 0; - rlind = 0; - } - if (rlbuf == 0) - { - eof = 1; - break; - } - c = rlbuf[rlind++]; - } - else - { -#endif - - if (print_ps2) - { - if (ps2 == 0) - ps2 = get_string_value ("PS2"); - fprintf (stderr, "%s", ps2 ? ps2 : ""); - fflush (stderr); - print_ps2 = 0; - } - -#if 0 - if (posixly_correct == 0) - interrupt_immediately++; -#endif - reading = 1; - if (unbuffered_read == 2) - retval = posixly_correct ? zreadintr (fd, &c, 1) : zreadn (fd, &c, nchars - nr); - else if (unbuffered_read) - retval = posixly_correct ? zreadintr (fd, &c, 1) : zread (fd, &c, 1); - else - retval = posixly_correct ? zreadcintr (fd, &c) : zreadc (fd, &c); - reading = 0; -#if 0 - if (posixly_correct == 0) - interrupt_immediately--; -#endif - - if (retval <= 0) - { - if (retval < 0 && errno == EINTR) - { - lastsig = LASTSIG(); - if (lastsig == 0) - lastsig = trapped_signal_received; - run_pending_traps (); /* because interrupt_immediately is not set */ - } - else - lastsig = 0; - CHECK_TERMSIG; - eof = 1; - break; - } - - CHECK_ALRM; - -#if defined (READLINE) - } -#endif - - CHECK_ALRM; - if (i + 4 >= size) /* XXX was i + 2; use i + 4 for multibyte/read_mbchar */ - { - char *t; - t = (char *)xrealloc (input_string, size += 128); - - /* Only need to change unwind-protect if input_string changes */ - if (t != input_string) - { - input_string = t; - remove_unwind_protect (); - add_unwind_protect (xfree, input_string); - } - } - - /* If the next character is to be accepted verbatim, a backslash - newline pair still disappears from the input. */ - if (pass_next) - { - pass_next = 0; - if (c == '\n') - { - i--; /* back up over the CTLESC */ - if (interactive && input_is_tty && raw == 0) - print_ps2 = 1; - } - else - goto add_char; - continue; - } - - /* This may cause problems if IFS contains CTLESC */ - if (c == '\\' && raw == 0) - { - pass_next++; - if (skip_ctlesc == 0) - { - saw_escape++; - input_string[i++] = CTLESC; - } - continue; - } - - if ((unsigned char)c == delim) - break; - - if (c == '\0' && delim != '\0') - continue; /* skip NUL bytes in input */ - - if ((skip_ctlesc == 0 && c == CTLESC) || (skip_ctlnul == 0 && c == CTLNUL)) - { - saw_escape++; - input_string[i++] = CTLESC; - } - -add_char: - input_string[i++] = c; - CHECK_ALRM; - -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) - if (nchars > 0 && MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && is_basic (c) == 0) - { - input_string[i] = '\0'; /* for simplicity and debugging */ - i += read_mbchar (fd, input_string, i, c, unbuffered_read); - } -#endif - - nr++; - - if (nchars > 0 && nr >= nchars) - break; - } - input_string[i] = '\0'; - CHECK_ALRM; - - if (retval < 0) - { - t_errno = errno; - if (errno != EINTR) - builtin_error (_("read error: %d: %s"), fd, strerror (errno)); - run_unwind_frame ("read_builtin"); - return ((t_errno != EINTR) ? EXECUTION_FAILURE : 128+lastsig); - } - - if (tmsec > 0 || tmusec > 0) - reset_alarm (); - - if (nchars > 0 || delim != '\n') - { -#if defined (READLINE) - if (edit) - { - if (nchars > 0) - rl_num_chars_to_read = 0; - if (delim != '\n') - reset_eol_delim ((char *)NULL); - } - else -#endif - if (input_is_tty) - ttyrestore (&termsave); - } - else if (silent) - ttyrestore (&termsave); - - if (unbuffered_read == 0) - zsyncfd (fd); - - discard_unwind_frame ("read_builtin"); - - retval = eof ? EXECUTION_FAILURE : EXECUTION_SUCCESS; - -assign_vars: - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - /* If -a was given, take the string read, break it into a list of words, - an assign them to `arrayname' in turn. */ - if (arrayname) - { - if (legal_identifier (arrayname) == 0) - { - sh_invalidid (arrayname); - xfree (input_string); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - - var = find_or_make_array_variable (arrayname, 1); - if (var == 0) - { - xfree (input_string); - return EXECUTION_FAILURE; /* readonly or noassign */ - } - if (assoc_p (var)) - { - builtin_error (_("%s: cannot convert associative to indexed array"), arrayname); - xfree (input_string); - return EXECUTION_FAILURE; /* existing associative array */ - } - else if (invisible_p (var)) - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - array_flush (array_cell (var)); - - alist = list_string (input_string, ifs_chars, 0); - if (alist) - { - if (saw_escape) - dequote_list (alist); - else - word_list_remove_quoted_nulls (alist); - assign_array_var_from_word_list (var, alist, 0); - dispose_words (alist); - } - xfree (input_string); - return (retval); - } -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - - /* If there are no variables, save the text of the line read to the - variable $REPLY. ksh93 strips leading and trailing IFS whitespace, - so that `read x ; echo "$x"' and `read ; echo "$REPLY"' behave the - same way, but I believe that the difference in behaviors is useful - enough to not do it. Without the bash behavior, there is no way - to read a line completely without interpretation or modification - unless you mess with $IFS (e.g., setting it to the empty string). - If you disagree, change the occurrences of `#if 0' to `#if 1' below. */ - if (list == 0) - { -#if 0 - orig_input_string = input_string; - for (t = input_string; ifs_chars && *ifs_chars && spctabnl(*t) && isifs(*t); t++) - ; - input_string = t; - input_string = strip_trailing_ifs_whitespace (input_string, ifs_chars, saw_escape); -#endif - - if (saw_escape) - { - t = dequote_string (input_string); - var = bind_variable ("REPLY", t, 0); - free (t); - } - else - var = bind_variable ("REPLY", input_string, 0); - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - - xfree (input_string); - return (retval); - } - - /* This code implements the Posix.2 spec for splitting the words - read and assigning them to variables. */ - orig_input_string = input_string; - - /* Remove IFS white space at the beginning of the input string. If - $IFS is null, no field splitting is performed. */ - for (t = input_string; ifs_chars && *ifs_chars && spctabnl(*t) && isifs(*t); t++) - ; - input_string = t; - for (; list->next; list = list->next) - { - varname = list->word->word; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (legal_identifier (varname) == 0 && valid_array_reference (varname) == 0) -#else - if (legal_identifier (varname) == 0) -#endif - { - sh_invalidid (varname); - xfree (orig_input_string); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - - /* If there are more variables than words read from the input, - the remaining variables are set to the empty string. */ - if (*input_string) - { - /* This call updates INPUT_STRING. */ - t = get_word_from_string (&input_string, ifs_chars, &e); - if (t) - *e = '\0'; - /* Don't bother to remove the CTLESC unless we added one - somewhere while reading the string. */ - if (t && saw_escape) - { - t1 = dequote_string (t); - var = bind_read_variable (varname, t1); - xfree (t1); - } - else - var = bind_read_variable (varname, t ? t : ""); - } - else - { - t = (char *)0; - var = bind_read_variable (varname, ""); - } - - FREE (t); - if (var == 0) - { - xfree (orig_input_string); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - - stupidly_hack_special_variables (varname); - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - } - - /* Now assign the rest of the line to the last variable argument. */ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (legal_identifier (list->word->word) == 0 && valid_array_reference (list->word->word) == 0) -#else - if (legal_identifier (list->word->word) == 0) -#endif - { - sh_invalidid (list->word->word); - xfree (orig_input_string); - return (EXECUTION_FAILURE); - } - -#if 0 - /* This has to be done this way rather than using string_list - and list_string because Posix.2 says that the last variable gets the - remaining words and their intervening separators. */ - input_string = strip_trailing_ifs_whitespace (input_string, ifs_chars, saw_escape); -#else - /* Check whether or not the number of fields is exactly the same as the - number of variables. */ - tofree = NULL; - if (*input_string) - { - t1 = input_string; - t = get_word_from_string (&input_string, ifs_chars, &e); - if (*input_string == 0) - tofree = input_string = t; - else - { - input_string = strip_trailing_ifs_whitespace (t1, ifs_chars, saw_escape); - tofree = t; - } - } -#endif - - if (saw_escape && input_string && *input_string) - { - t = dequote_string (input_string); - var = bind_read_variable (list->word->word, t); - xfree (t); - } - else - var = bind_read_variable (list->word->word, input_string ? input_string : ""); - - if (var) - { - stupidly_hack_special_variables (list->word->word); - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - } - else - retval = EXECUTION_FAILURE; - - FREE (tofree); - xfree (orig_input_string); - - return (retval); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_read_variable (name, value) - char *name, *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (valid_array_reference (name) == 0) - v = bind_variable (name, value, 0); - else - v = assign_array_element (name, value, 0); -#else /* !ARRAY_VARS */ - v = bind_variable (name, value, 0); -#endif /* !ARRAY_VARS */ - return (v == 0 ? v - : ((readonly_p (v) || noassign_p (v)) ? (SHELL_VAR *)NULL : v)); -} - -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) -static int -read_mbchar (fd, string, ind, ch, unbuffered) - int fd; - char *string; - int ind, ch, unbuffered; -{ - char mbchar[MB_LEN_MAX + 1]; - int i, n, r; - char c; - size_t ret; - mbstate_t ps, ps_back; - wchar_t wc; - - memset (&ps, '\0', sizeof (mbstate_t)); - memset (&ps_back, '\0', sizeof (mbstate_t)); - - mbchar[0] = ch; - i = 1; - for (n = 0; n <= MB_LEN_MAX; n++) - { - ps_back = ps; - ret = mbrtowc (&wc, mbchar, i, &ps); - if (ret == (size_t)-2) - { - ps = ps_back; - /* We don't want to be interrupted during a multibyte char read */ - if (unbuffered) - r = zread (fd, &c, 1); - else - r = zreadc (fd, &c); - if (r < 0) - goto mbchar_return; - mbchar[i++] = c; - continue; - } - else if (ret == (size_t)-1 || ret == (size_t)0 || ret > (size_t)0) - break; - } - -mbchar_return: - if (i > 1) /* read a multibyte char */ - /* mbchar[0] is already string[ind-1] */ - for (r = 1; r < i; r++) - string[ind+r-1] = mbchar[r]; - return i - 1; -} -#endif - - -static void -ttyrestore (ttp) - struct ttsave *ttp; -{ - ttsetattr (ttp->fd, ttp->attrs); -} - -#if defined (READLINE) -static rl_completion_func_t *old_attempted_completion_function = 0; -static rl_hook_func_t *old_startup_hook; -static char *deftext; - -static void -reset_attempted_completion_function (cp) - char *cp; -{ - if (rl_attempted_completion_function == 0 && old_attempted_completion_function) - rl_attempted_completion_function = old_attempted_completion_function; -} - -static int -set_itext () -{ - int r1, r2; - - r1 = r2 = 0; - if (old_startup_hook) - r1 = (*old_startup_hook) (); - if (deftext) - { - r2 = rl_insert_text (deftext); - deftext = (char *)NULL; - rl_startup_hook = old_startup_hook; - old_startup_hook = (rl_hook_func_t *)NULL; - } - return (r1 || r2); -} - -static char * -edit_line (p, itext) - char *p; - char *itext; -{ - char *ret; - int len; - - if (bash_readline_initialized == 0) - initialize_readline (); - - old_attempted_completion_function = rl_attempted_completion_function; - rl_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - if (itext) - { - old_startup_hook = rl_startup_hook; - rl_startup_hook = set_itext; - deftext = itext; - } - - ret = readline (p); - - rl_attempted_completion_function = old_attempted_completion_function; - old_attempted_completion_function = (rl_completion_func_t *)NULL; - - if (ret == 0) - return ret; - len = strlen (ret); - ret = (char *)xrealloc (ret, len + 2); - ret[len++] = delim; - ret[len] = '\0'; - return ret; -} - -static int old_delim_ctype; -static rl_command_func_t *old_delim_func; -static int old_newline_ctype; -static rl_command_func_t *old_newline_func; - -static unsigned char delim_char; - -static void -set_eol_delim (c) - int c; -{ - Keymap cmap; - - if (bash_readline_initialized == 0) - initialize_readline (); - cmap = rl_get_keymap (); - - /* Change newline to self-insert */ - old_newline_ctype = cmap[RETURN].type; - old_newline_func = cmap[RETURN].function; - cmap[RETURN].type = ISFUNC; - cmap[RETURN].function = rl_insert; - - /* Bind the delimiter character to accept-line. */ - old_delim_ctype = cmap[c].type; - old_delim_func = cmap[c].function; - cmap[c].type = ISFUNC; - cmap[c].function = rl_newline; - - delim_char = c; -} - -static void -reset_eol_delim (cp) - char *cp; -{ - Keymap cmap; - - cmap = rl_get_keymap (); - - cmap[RETURN].type = old_newline_ctype; - cmap[RETURN].function = old_newline_func; - - cmap[delim_char].type = old_delim_ctype; - cmap[delim_char].function = old_delim_func; -} -#endif diff --git a/cross-build/cygwin32.cache.old b/cross-build/cygwin32.cache.old deleted file mode 100644 index 640390fbf..000000000 --- a/cross-build/cygwin32.cache.old +++ /dev/null @@ -1,42 +0,0 @@ -# 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 diff --git a/doc/FAQ.orig b/doc/FAQ.orig deleted file mode 100644 index 1cff3c8ef..000000000 --- a/doc/FAQ.orig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1745 +0,0 @@ -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 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 $(, &>, >|, <<<, [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. diff --git a/doc/bash.1~ b/doc/bash.1~ deleted file mode 100644 index 64475cf63..000000000 --- a/doc/bash.1~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,10307 +0,0 @@ -.\" -.\" MAN PAGE COMMENTS to -.\" -.\" Chet Ramey -.\" Case Western Reserve University -.\" chet@po.cwru.edu -.\" -.\" Last Change: Tue Aug 6 09:55:50 EDT 2013 -.\" -.\" bash_builtins, strip all but Built-Ins section -.if \n(zZ=1 .ig zZ -.if \n(zY=1 .ig zY -.TH BASH 1 "2013 August 6" "GNU Bash 4.3" -.\" -.\" There's some problem with having a `@' -.\" in a tagged paragraph with the BSD man macros. -.\" It has to do with `@' appearing in the }1 macro. -.\" This is a problem on 4.3 BSD and Ultrix, but Sun -.\" appears to have fixed it. -.\" If you're seeing the characters -.\" `@u-3p' appearing before the lines reading -.\" `possible-hostname-completions -.\" and `complete-hostname' down in READLINE, -.\" then uncomment this redefinition. -.\" -.de }1 -.ds ]X \&\\*(]B\\ -.nr )E 0 -.if !"\\$1"" .nr )I \\$1n -.}f -.ll \\n(LLu -.in \\n()Ru+\\n(INu+\\n()Iu -.ti \\n(INu -.ie !\\n()Iu+\\n()Ru-\w\\*(]Xu-3p \{\\*(]X -.br\} -.el \\*(]X\h|\\n()Iu+\\n()Ru\c -.}f -.. -.\" -.\" File Name macro. This used to be `.PN', for Path Name, -.\" but Sun doesn't seem to like that very much. -.\" -.de FN -\fI\|\\$1\|\fP -.. -.SH NAME -bash \- GNU Bourne-Again SHell -.SH SYNOPSIS -.B bash -[options] -[command_string | file] -.SH COPYRIGHT -.if n Bash is Copyright (C) 1989-2013 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. -.if t Bash is Copyright \(co 1989-2013 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. -.SH DESCRIPTION -.B Bash -is an \fBsh\fR-compatible command language interpreter that -executes commands read from the standard input or from a file. -.B Bash -also incorporates useful features from the \fIKorn\fP and \fIC\fP -shells (\fBksh\fP and \fBcsh\fP). -.PP -.B Bash -is intended to be a conformant implementation of the -Shell and Utilities portion of the IEEE POSIX specification -(IEEE Standard 1003.1). -.B Bash -can be configured to be POSIX-conformant by default. -.SH OPTIONS -All of the single-character shell options documented in the -description of the \fBset\fR builtin command can be used as options -when the shell is invoked. -In addition, \fBbash\fR -interprets the following options when it is invoked: -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP 10 -.B \-c -If the -.B \-c -option is present, then commands are read from the first non-option argument -.IR command_string . -If there are arguments after the -.IR command_string , -they are assigned to the positional parameters, starting with -.BR $0 . -.TP -.B \-i -If the -.B \-i -option is present, the shell is -.IR interactive . -.TP -.B \-l -Make -.B bash -act as if it had been invoked as a login shell (see -.SM -.B INVOCATION -below). -.TP -.B \-r -If the -.B \-r -option is present, the shell becomes -.I restricted -(see -.SM -.B "RESTRICTED SHELL" -below). -.TP -.B \-s -If the -.B \-s -option is present, or if no arguments remain after option -processing, then commands are read from the standard input. -This option allows the positional parameters to be set -when invoking an interactive shell. -.TP -.B \-D -A list of all double-quoted strings preceded by \fB$\fP -is printed on the standard output. -These are the strings that -are subject to language translation when the current locale -is not \fBC\fP or \fBPOSIX\fP. -This implies the \fB\-n\fP option; no commands will be executed. -.TP -.B [\-+]O [\fIshopt_option\fP] -\fIshopt_option\fP is one of the shell options accepted by the -\fBshopt\fP builtin (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -If \fIshopt_option\fP is present, \fB\-O\fP sets the value of that option; -\fB+O\fP unsets it. -If \fIshopt_option\fP is not supplied, the names and values of the shell -options accepted by \fBshopt\fP are printed on the standard output. -If the invocation option is \fB+O\fP, the output is displayed in a format -that may be reused as input. -.TP -.B \-\- -A -.B \-\- -signals the end of options and disables further option processing. -Any arguments after the -.B \-\- -are treated as filenames and arguments. An argument of -.B \- -is equivalent to \fB\-\-\fP. -.PD -.PP -.B Bash -also interprets a number of multi-character options. -These options must appear on the command line before the -single-character options to be recognized. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-\-debugger -Arrange for the debugger profile to be executed before the shell -starts. -Turns on extended debugging mode (see the description of the -.B extdebug -option to the -.B shopt -builtin below). -.TP -.B \-\-dump\-po\-strings -Equivalent to \fB\-D\fP, but the output is in the GNU \fIgettext\fP -\fBpo\fP (portable object) file format. -.TP -.B \-\-dump\-strings -Equivalent to \fB\-D\fP. -.TP -.B \-\-help -Display a usage message on standard output and exit successfully. -.TP -\fB\-\-init\-file\fP \fIfile\fP -.PD 0 -.TP -\fB\-\-rcfile\fP \fIfile\fP -.PD -Execute commands from -.I file -instead of the standard personal initialization file -.I ~/.bashrc -if the shell is interactive (see -.SM -.B INVOCATION -below). -.TP -.B \-\-login -Equivalent to \fB\-l\fP. -.TP -.B \-\-noediting -Do not use the GNU -.B readline -library to read command lines when the shell is interactive. -.TP -.B \-\-noprofile -Do not read either the system-wide startup file -.FN /etc/profile -or any of the personal initialization files -.IR ~/.bash_profile , -.IR ~/.bash_login , -or -.IR ~/.profile . -By default, -.B bash -reads these files when it is invoked as a login shell (see -.SM -.B INVOCATION -below). -.TP -.B \-\-norc -Do not read and execute the personal initialization file -.I ~/.bashrc -if the shell is interactive. -This option is on by default if the shell is invoked as -.BR sh . -.TP -.B \-\-posix -Change the behavior of \fBbash\fP where the default operation differs -from the POSIX standard to match the standard (\fIposix mode\fP). -See -.SM -.B "SEE ALSO" -below for a reference to a document that details how posix mode affects -bash's behavior. -.TP -.B \-\-restricted -The shell becomes restricted (see -.SM -.B "RESTRICTED SHELL" -below). -.TP -.B \-\-verbose -Equivalent to \fB\-v\fP. -.TP -.B \-\-version -Show version information for this instance of -.B bash -on the standard output and exit successfully. -.PD -.SH ARGUMENTS -If arguments remain after option processing, and neither the -.B \-c -nor the -.B \-s -option has been supplied, the first argument is assumed to -be the name of a file containing shell commands. -If -.B bash -is invoked in this fashion, -.B $0 -is set to the name of the file, and the positional parameters -are set to the remaining arguments. -.B Bash -reads and executes commands from this file, then exits. -\fBBash\fP's exit status is the exit status of the last command -executed in the script. -If no commands are executed, the exit status is 0. -An attempt is first made to open the file in the current directory, and, -if no file is found, then the shell searches the directories in -.SM -.B PATH -for the script. -.SH INVOCATION -A \fIlogin shell\fP is one whose first character of argument zero is a -.BR \- , -or one started with the -.B \-\-login -option. -.PP -An \fIinteractive\fP shell is one started without non-option arguments -and without the -.B \-c -option -whose standard input and error are -both connected to terminals (as determined by -.IR isatty (3)), -or one started with the -.B \-i -option. -.SM -.B PS1 -is set and -.B $\- -includes -.B i -if -.B bash -is interactive, -allowing a shell script or a startup file to test this state. -.PP -The following paragraphs describe how -.B bash -executes its startup files. -If any of the files exist but cannot be read, -.B bash -reports an error. -Tildes are expanded in filenames as described below under -.B "Tilde Expansion" -in the -.SM -.B EXPANSION -section. -.PP -When -.B bash -is invoked as an interactive login shell, or as a non-interactive shell -with the \fB\-\-login\fP option, it first reads and -executes commands from the file \fI/etc/profile\fP, if that -file exists. -After reading that file, it looks for \fI~/.bash_profile\fP, -\fI~/.bash_login\fP, and \fI~/.profile\fP, in that order, and reads -and executes commands from the first one that exists and is readable. -The -.B \-\-noprofile -option may be used when the shell is started to inhibit this behavior. -.PP -When a login shell exits, -.B bash -reads and executes commands from the file \fI~/.bash_logout\fP, if it -exists. -.PP -When an interactive shell that is not a login shell is started, -.B bash -reads and executes commands from \fI~/.bashrc\fP, if that file exists. -This may be inhibited by using the -.B \-\-norc -option. -The \fB\-\-rcfile\fP \fIfile\fP option will force -.B bash -to read and execute commands from \fIfile\fP instead of \fI~/.bashrc\fP. -.PP -When -.B bash -is started non-interactively, to run a shell script, for example, it -looks for the variable -.SM -.B BASH_ENV -in the environment, expands its value if it appears there, and uses the -expanded value as the name of a file to read and execute. -.B Bash -behaves as if the following command were executed: -.sp .5 -.RS -.if t \f(CWif [ \-n "$BASH_ENV" ]; then . "$BASH_ENV"; fi\fP -.if n if [ \-n "$BASH_ENV" ]; then . "$BASH_ENV"; fi -.RE -.sp .5 -but the value of the -.SM -.B PATH -variable is not used to search for the filename. -.PP -If -.B bash -is invoked with the name -.BR sh , -it tries to mimic the startup behavior of historical versions of -.B sh -as closely as possible, -while conforming to the POSIX standard as well. -When invoked as an interactive login shell, or a non-interactive -shell with the \fB\-\-login\fP option, it first attempts to -read and execute commands from -.I /etc/profile -and -.IR ~/.profile , -in that order. -The -.B \-\-noprofile -option may be used to inhibit this behavior. -When invoked as an interactive shell with the name -.BR sh , -.B bash -looks for the variable -.SM -.BR ENV , -expands its value if it is defined, and uses the -expanded value as the name of a file to read and execute. -Since a shell invoked as -.B sh -does not attempt to read and execute commands from any other startup -files, the -.B \-\-rcfile -option has no effect. -A non-interactive shell invoked with the name -.B sh -does not attempt to read any other startup files. -When invoked as -.BR sh , -.B bash -enters -.I posix -mode after the startup files are read. -.PP -When -.B bash -is started in -.I posix -mode, as with the -.B \-\-posix -command line option, it follows the POSIX standard for startup files. -In this mode, interactive shells expand the -.SM -.B ENV -variable and commands are read and executed from the file -whose name is the expanded value. -No other startup files are read. -.PP -.B Bash -attempts to determine when it is being run with its standard input -connected to a network connection, as when executed by the remote shell -daemon, usually \fIrshd\fP, or the secure shell daemon \fIsshd\fP. -If -.B bash -determines it is being run in this fashion, it reads and executes -commands from \fI~/.bashrc\fP, if that file exists and is readable. -It will not do this if invoked as \fBsh\fP. -The -.B \-\-norc -option may be used to inhibit this behavior, and the -.B \-\-rcfile -option may be used to force another file to be read, but neither -\fIrshd\fP nor \fIsshd\fP generally invoke the shell with those options -or allow them to be specified. -.PP -If the shell is started with the effective user (group) id not equal to the -real user (group) id, and the \fB\-p\fP option is not supplied, no startup -files are read, shell functions are not inherited from the environment, the -.SM -.BR SHELLOPTS , -.SM -.BR BASHOPTS , -.SM -.BR CDPATH , -and -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -variables, if they appear in the environment, are ignored, -and the effective user id is set to the real user id. -If the \fB\-p\fP option is supplied at invocation, the startup behavior is -the same, but the effective user id is not reset. -.SH DEFINITIONS -.PP -The following definitions are used throughout the rest of this -document. -.PD 0 -.TP -.B blank -A space or tab. -.TP -.B word -A sequence of characters considered as a single unit by the shell. -Also known as a -.BR token . -.TP -.B name -A -.I word -consisting only of alphanumeric characters and underscores, and -beginning with an alphabetic character or an underscore. Also -referred to as an -.BR identifier . -.TP -.B metacharacter -A character that, when unquoted, separates words. One of the following: -.br -.RS -.PP -.if t \fB| & ; ( ) < > space tab\fP -.if n \fB| & ; ( ) < > space tab\fP -.RE -.PP -.TP -.B control operator -A \fItoken\fP that performs a control function. It is one of the following -symbols: -.RS -.PP -.if t \fB|| & && ; ;; ( ) | |& \fP -.if n \fB|| & && ; ;; ( ) | |& \fP -.RE -.PD -.SH "RESERVED WORDS" -\fIReserved words\fP are words that have a special meaning to the shell. -The following words are recognized as reserved when unquoted and either -the first word of a simple command (see -.SM -.B SHELL GRAMMAR -below) or the third word of a -.B case -or -.B for -command: -.if t .RS -.PP -.B -.if n ! case coproc do done elif else esac fi for function if in select then until while { } time [[ ]] -.if t ! case coproc do done elif else esac fi for function if in select then until while { } time [[ ]] -.if t .RE -.SH "SHELL GRAMMAR" -.SS Simple Commands -.PP -A \fIsimple command\fP is a sequence of optional variable assignments -followed by \fBblank\fP-separated words and redirections, and -terminated by a \fIcontrol operator\fP. The first word -specifies the command to be executed, and is passed as argument zero. -The remaining words are passed as arguments to the invoked command. -.PP -The return value of a \fIsimple command\fP is its exit status, or -128+\fIn\^\fP if the command is terminated by signal -.IR n . -.SS Pipelines -.PP -A \fIpipeline\fP is a sequence of one or more commands separated by -one of the control operators -.B | -or \fB|&\fP. -The format for a pipeline is: -.RS -.PP -[\fBtime\fP [\fB\-p\fP]] [ ! ] \fIcommand\fP [ [\fB|\fP\(bv\fB|&\fP] \fIcommand2\fP ... ] -.RE -.PP -The standard output of -.I command -is connected via a pipe to the standard input of -.IR command2 . -This connection is performed before any redirections specified by the -command (see -.SM -.B REDIRECTION -below). -If \fB|&\fP is used, \fIcommand\fP's standard error, in addition to its -standard output, is connected to -\fIcommand2\fP's standard input through the pipe; -it is shorthand for \fB2>&1 |\fP. -This implicit redirection of the standard error to the standard output is -performed after any redirections specified by the command. -.PP -The return status of a pipeline is the exit status of the last -command, unless the \fBpipefail\fP option is enabled. -If \fBpipefail\fP is enabled, the pipeline's return status is the -value of the last (rightmost) command to exit with a non-zero status, -or zero if all commands exit successfully. -If the reserved word -.B ! -precedes a pipeline, the exit status of that pipeline is the logical -negation of the exit status as described above. -The shell waits for all commands in the pipeline to -terminate before returning a value. -.PP -If the -.B time -reserved word precedes a pipeline, the elapsed as well as user and -system time consumed by its execution are reported when the pipeline -terminates. -The \fB\-p\fP option changes the output format to that specified by POSIX. -When the shell is in \fIposix mode\fP, it does not recognize -\fBtime\fP as a reserved word if the next token begins with a `-'. -The -.SM -.B TIMEFORMAT -variable may be set to a format string that specifies how the timing -information should be displayed; see the description of -.SM -.B TIMEFORMAT -under -.B "Shell Variables" -below. -.PP -When the shell is in \fIposix mode\fP, \fBtime\fP -may be followed by a newline. In this case, the shell displays the -total user and system time consumed by the shell and its children. -The -.SM -.B TIMEFORMAT -variable may be used to specify the format of -the time information. -.PP -Each command in a pipeline is executed as a separate process (i.e., in a -subshell). -.SS Lists -.PP -A \fIlist\fP is a sequence of one or more pipelines separated by one -of the operators -.BR ; , -.BR & , -.BR && , -or -.BR || , -and optionally terminated by one of -.BR ; , -.BR & , -or -.BR . -.PP -Of these list operators, -.B && -and -.B || -have equal precedence, followed by -.B ; -and -.BR & , -which have equal precedence. -.PP -A sequence of one or more newlines may appear in a \fIlist\fP instead -of a semicolon to delimit commands. -.PP -If a command is terminated by the control operator -.BR & , -the shell executes the command in the \fIbackground\fP -in a subshell. The shell does not wait for the command to -finish, and the return status is 0. Commands separated by a -.B ; -are executed sequentially; the shell waits for each -command to terminate in turn. The return status is the -exit status of the last command executed. -.PP -AND and OR lists are sequences of one of more pipelines separated by the -\fB&&\fP and \fB||\fP control operators, respectively. -AND and OR lists are executed with left associativity. -An AND list has the form -.RS -.PP -\fIcommand1\fP \fB&&\fP \fIcommand2\fP -.RE -.PP -.I command2 -is executed if, and only if, -.I command1 -returns an exit status of zero. -.PP -An OR list has the form -.RS -.PP -\fIcommand1\fP \fB||\fP \fIcommand2\fP -.PP -.RE -.PP -.I command2 -is executed if and only if -.I command1 -returns a non-zero exit status. -The return status of -AND and OR lists is the exit status of the last command -executed in the list. -.SS Compound Commands -.PP -A \fIcompound command\fP is one of the following. -In most cases a \fIlist\fP in a command's description may be separated from -the rest of the command by one or more newlines, and may be followed by a -newline in place of a semicolon. -.TP -(\fIlist\fP) -\fIlist\fP is executed in a subshell environment (see -.SM -\fBCOMMAND EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT\fP -below). -Variable assignments and builtin -commands that affect the shell's environment do not remain in effect -after the command completes. The return status is the exit status of -\fIlist\fP. -.TP -{ \fIlist\fP; } -\fIlist\fP is simply executed in the current shell environment. -\fIlist\fP must be terminated with a newline or semicolon. -This is known as a \fIgroup command\fP. -The return status is the exit status of -\fIlist\fP. -Note that unlike the metacharacters \fB(\fP and \fB)\fP, \fB{\fP and -\fB}\fP are \fIreserved words\fP and must occur where a reserved -word is permitted to be recognized. Since they do not cause a word -break, they must be separated from \fIlist\fP by whitespace or another -shell metacharacter. -.TP -((\fIexpression\fP)) -The \fIexpression\fP is evaluated according to the rules described -below under -.SM -.BR "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" . -If the value of the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0; -otherwise the return status is 1. This is exactly equivalent to -\fBlet "\fIexpression\fP"\fR. -.TP -\fB[[\fP \fIexpression\fP \fB]]\fP -Return a status of 0 or 1 depending on the evaluation of -the conditional expression \fIexpression\fP. -Expressions are composed of the primaries described below under -.SM -.BR "CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS" . -Word splitting and pathname expansion are not performed on the words -between the \fB[[\fP and \fB]]\fP; tilde expansion, -parameter and variable expansion, -arithmetic expansion, command substitution, process -substitution, and quote removal are performed. -Conditional operators such as \fB\-f\fP must be unquoted to be recognized -as primaries. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -When used with \fB[[\fP, the \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators sort -lexicographically using the current locale. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -When the \fB==\fP and \fB!=\fP operators are used, the string to the -right of the operator is considered a pattern and matched according -to the rules described below under \fBPattern Matching\fP. -The \fB=\fP operator is equivalent to \fB==\fP. -If the shell option -.B nocasematch -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -The return value is 0 if the string matches (\fB==\fP) or does not match -(\fB!=\fP) the pattern, and 1 otherwise. -Any part of the pattern may be quoted to force the quoted portion -to be matched as a string. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -An additional binary operator, \fB=~\fP, is available, with the same -precedence as \fB==\fP and \fB!=\fP. -When it is used, the string to the right of the operator is considered -an extended regular expression and matched accordingly (as in \fIregex\fP(3)). -The return value is 0 if the string matches -the pattern, and 1 otherwise. -If the regular expression is syntactically incorrect, the conditional -expression's return value is 2. -If the shell option -.B nocasematch -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -Any part of the pattern may be quoted to force the quoted portion -to be matched as a string. -Bracket expressions in regular expressions must be treated carefully, -since normal quoting characters lose their meanings between brackets. -If the pattern is stored in a shell variable, quoting the variable -expansion forces the entire pattern to be matched as a string. -Substrings matched by parenthesized subexpressions within the regular -expression are saved in the array variable -.SM -.BR BASH_REMATCH . -The element of -.SM -.B BASH_REMATCH -with index 0 is the portion of the string -matching the entire regular expression. -The element of -.SM -.B BASH_REMATCH -with index \fIn\fP is the portion of the -string matching the \fIn\fPth parenthesized subexpression. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Expressions may be combined using the following operators, listed -in decreasing order of precedence: -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B ( \fIexpression\fP ) -Returns the value of \fIexpression\fP. -This may be used to override the normal precedence of operators. -.TP -.B ! \fIexpression\fP -True if -.I expression -is false. -.TP -\fIexpression1\fP \fB&&\fP \fIexpression2\fP -True if both -.I expression1 -and -.I expression2 -are true. -.TP -\fIexpression1\fP \fB||\fP \fIexpression2\fP -True if either -.I expression1 -or -.I expression2 -is true. -.PD -.LP -The \fB&&\fP and \fB||\fP -operators do not evaluate \fIexpression2\fP if the value of -\fIexpression1\fP is sufficient to determine the return value of -the entire conditional expression. -.RE -.TP -\fBfor\fP \fIname\fP [ [ \fBin\fP [ \fIword ...\fP ] ] ; ] \fBdo\fP \fIlist\fP ; \fBdone\fP -The list of words following \fBin\fP is expanded, generating a list -of items. -The variable \fIname\fP is set to each element of this list -in turn, and \fIlist\fP is executed each time. -If the \fBin\fP \fIword\fP is omitted, the \fBfor\fP command executes -\fIlist\fP once for each positional parameter that is set (see -.SM -.B PARAMETERS -below). -The return status is the exit status of the last command that executes. -If the expansion of the items following \fBin\fP results in an empty -list, no commands are executed, and the return status is 0. -.TP -\fBfor\fP (( \fIexpr1\fP ; \fIexpr2\fP ; \fIexpr3\fP )) ; \fBdo\fP \fIlist\fP ; \fBdone\fP -First, the arithmetic expression \fIexpr1\fP is evaluated according -to the rules described below under -.SM -.BR "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" . -The arithmetic expression \fIexpr2\fP is then evaluated repeatedly -until it evaluates to zero. -Each time \fIexpr2\fP evaluates to a non-zero value, \fIlist\fP is -executed and the arithmetic expression \fIexpr3\fP is evaluated. -If any expression is omitted, it behaves as if it evaluates to 1. -The return value is the exit status of the last command in \fIlist\fP -that is executed, or false if any of the expressions is invalid. -.TP -\fBselect\fP \fIname\fP [ \fBin\fP \fIword\fP ] ; \fBdo\fP \fIlist\fP ; \fBdone\fP -The list of words following \fBin\fP is expanded, generating a list -of items. The set of expanded words is printed on the standard -error, each preceded by a number. If the \fBin\fP -\fIword\fP is omitted, the positional parameters are printed (see -.SM -.B PARAMETERS -below). The -.SM -.B PS3 -prompt is then displayed and a line read from the standard input. -If the line consists of a number corresponding to one of -the displayed words, then the value of -.I name -is set to that word. If the line is empty, the words and prompt -are displayed again. If EOF is read, the command completes. Any -other value read causes -.I name -to be set to null. The line read is saved in the variable -.SM -.BR REPLY . -The -.I list -is executed after each selection until a -.B break -command is executed. -The exit status of -.B select -is the exit status of the last command executed in -.IR list , -or zero if no commands were executed. -.TP -\fBcase\fP \fIword\fP \fBin\fP [ [(] \fIpattern\fP [ \fB|\fP \fIpattern\fP ] \ -... ) \fIlist\fP ;; ] ... \fBesac\fP -A \fBcase\fP command first expands \fIword\fP, and tries to match -it against each \fIpattern\fP in turn, using the same matching rules -as for pathname expansion (see -.B Pathname Expansion -below). -The \fIword\fP is expanded using tilde -expansion, parameter and variable expansion, arithmetic substitution, -command substitution, process substitution and quote removal. -Each \fIpattern\fP examined is expanded using tilde -expansion, parameter and variable expansion, arithmetic substitution, -command substitution, and process substitution. -If the shell option -.B nocasematch -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -When a match is found, the corresponding \fIlist\fP is executed. -If the \fB;;\fP operator is used, no subsequent matches are attempted after -the first pattern match. -Using \fB;&\fP in place of \fB;;\fP causes execution to continue with -the \fIlist\fP associated with the next set of patterns. -Using \fB;;&\fP in place of \fB;;\fP causes the shell to test the next -pattern list in the statement, if any, and execute any associated \fIlist\fP -on a successful match. -The exit status is zero if no -pattern matches. Otherwise, it is the exit status of the -last command executed in \fIlist\fP. -.TP -\fBif\fP \fIlist\fP; \fBthen\fP \fIlist;\fP \ -[ \fBelif\fP \fIlist\fP; \fBthen\fP \fIlist\fP; ] ... \ -[ \fBelse\fP \fIlist\fP; ] \fBfi\fP -The -.B if -.I list -is executed. If its exit status is zero, the -\fBthen\fP \fIlist\fP is executed. Otherwise, each \fBelif\fP -\fIlist\fP is executed in turn, and if its exit status is zero, -the corresponding \fBthen\fP \fIlist\fP is executed and the -command completes. Otherwise, the \fBelse\fP \fIlist\fP is -executed, if present. The exit status is the exit status of the -last command executed, or zero if no condition tested true. -.TP -\fBwhile\fP \fIlist-1\fP; \fBdo\fP \fIlist-2\fP; \fBdone\fP -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBuntil\fP \fIlist-1\fP; \fBdo\fP \fIlist-2\fP; \fBdone\fP -.PD -The \fBwhile\fP command continuously executes the list -\fIlist-2\fP as long as the last command in the list \fIlist-1\fP returns -an exit status of zero. The \fBuntil\fP command is identical -to the \fBwhile\fP command, except that the test is negated; -.I list-2 -is executed as long as the last command in -.I list-1 -returns a non-zero exit status. -The exit status of the \fBwhile\fP and \fBuntil\fP commands -is the exit status -of the last command executed in \fIlist-2\fP, or zero if -none was executed. -.SS Coprocesses -.PP -A \fIcoprocess\fP is a shell command preceded by the \fBcoproc\fP reserved -word. -A coprocess is executed asynchronously in a subshell, as if the command -had been terminated with the \fB&\fP control operator, with a two-way pipe -established between the executing shell and the coprocess. -.PP -The format for a coprocess is: -.RS -.PP -\fBcoproc\fP [\fINAME\fP] \fIcommand\fP [\fIredirections\fP] -.RE -.PP -This creates a coprocess named \fINAME\fP. -If \fINAME\fP is not supplied, the default name is \fBCOPROC\fP. -\fINAME\fP must not be supplied if \fIcommand\fP is a \fIsimple -command\fP (see above); otherwise, it is interpreted as the first word -of the simple command. -When the coprocess is executed, the shell creates an array variable (see -.B Arrays -below) named \fINAME\fP in the context of the executing shell. -The standard output of -.I command -is connected via a pipe to a file descriptor in the executing shell, -and that file descriptor is assigned to \fINAME\fP[0]. -The standard input of -.I command -is connected via a pipe to a file descriptor in the executing shell, -and that file descriptor is assigned to \fINAME\fP[1]. -This pipe is established before any redirections specified by the -command (see -.SM -.B REDIRECTION -below). -The file descriptors can be utilized as arguments to shell commands -and redirections using standard word expansions. -The file descriptors are not available in subshells. -The process ID of the shell spawned to execute the coprocess is -available as the value of the variable \fINAME\fP_PID. -The \fBwait\fP -builtin command may be used to wait for the coprocess to terminate. -.PP -Since the coprocess is created as an asynchronous command, -the \fBcoproc\fP command always returns success. -The return status of a coprocess is the exit status of \fIcommand\fP. -.SS Shell Function Definitions -.PP -A shell function is an object that is called like a simple command and -executes a compound command with a new set of positional parameters. -Shell functions are declared as follows: -.TP -\fIname\fP () \fIcompound\-command\fP [\fIredirection\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBfunction\fP \fIname\fP [()] \fIcompound\-command\fP [\fIredirection\fP] -.PD -This defines a function named \fIname\fP. -The reserved word \fBfunction\fP is optional. -If the \fBfunction\fP reserved word is supplied, the parentheses are optional. -The \fIbody\fP of the function is the compound command -.I compound\-command -(see \fBCompound Commands\fP above). -That command is usually a \fIlist\fP of commands between { and }, but -may be any command listed under \fBCompound Commands\fP above. -\fIcompound\-command\fP is executed whenever \fIname\fP is specified as the -name of a simple command. -When in \fIposix mode\fP, \fIname\fP may not be the name of one of the -POSIX \fIspecial builtins\fP. -Any redirections (see -.SM -.B REDIRECTION -below) specified when a function is defined are performed -when the function is executed. -The exit status of a function definition is zero unless a syntax error -occurs or a readonly function with the same name already exists. -When executed, the exit status of a function is the exit status of the -last command executed in the body. (See -.SM -.B FUNCTIONS -below.) -.SH COMMENTS -In a non-interactive shell, or an interactive shell in which the -.B interactive_comments -option to the -.B shopt -builtin is enabled (see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below), a word beginning with -.B # -causes that word and all remaining characters on that line to -be ignored. An interactive shell without the -.B interactive_comments -option enabled does not allow comments. The -.B interactive_comments -option is on by default in interactive shells. -.SH QUOTING -\fIQuoting\fP is used to remove the special meaning of certain -characters or words to the shell. Quoting can be used to -disable special treatment for special characters, to prevent -reserved words from being recognized as such, and to prevent -parameter expansion. -.PP -Each of the \fImetacharacters\fP listed above under -.SM -.B DEFINITIONS -has special meaning to the shell and must be quoted if it is to -represent itself. -.PP -When the command history expansion facilities are being used -(see -.SM -.B HISTORY EXPANSION -below), the -\fIhistory expansion\fP character, usually \fB!\fP, must be quoted -to prevent history expansion. -.PP -There are three quoting mechanisms: the -.IR "escape character" , -single quotes, and double quotes. -.PP -A non-quoted backslash (\fB\e\fP) is the -.IR "escape character" . -It preserves the literal value of the next character that follows, -with the exception of . If a \fB\e\fP pair -appears, and the backslash is not itself quoted, the \fB\e\fP -is treated as a line continuation (that is, it is removed from the -input stream and effectively ignored). -.PP -Enclosing characters in single quotes preserves the literal value -of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur -between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash. -.PP -Enclosing characters in double quotes preserves the literal value -of all characters within the quotes, with the exception of -.BR $ , -.BR \` , -.BR \e , -and, when history expansion is enabled, -.BR ! . -The characters -.B $ -and -.B \` -retain their special meaning within double quotes. The backslash -retains its special meaning only when followed by one of the following -characters: -.BR $ , -.BR \` , -\^\fB"\fP\^, -.BR \e , -or -.BR . -A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with -a backslash. -If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless an -.B ! -appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. -The backslash preceding the -.B ! -is not removed. -.PP -The special parameters -.B * -and -.B @ -have special meaning when in double -quotes (see -.SM -.B PARAMETERS -below). -.PP -Words of the form \fB$\fP\(aq\fIstring\fP\(aq are treated specially. The -word expands to \fIstring\fP, with backslash-escaped characters replaced -as specified by the ANSI C standard. Backslash escape sequences, if -present, are decoded as follows: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \ea -alert (bell) -.TP -.B \eb -backspace -.TP -.B \ee -.TP -.B \eE -an escape character -.TP -.B \ef -form feed -.TP -.B \en -new line -.TP -.B \er -carriage return -.TP -.B \et -horizontal tab -.TP -.B \ev -vertical tab -.TP -.B \e\e -backslash -.TP -.B \e\(aq -single quote -.TP -.B \e\(dq -double quote -.TP -.B \e\fInnn\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the octal value \fInnn\fP -(one to three digits) -.TP -.B \ex\fIHH\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal value \fIHH\fP -(one or two hex digits) -.TP -.B \eu\fIHHHH\fP -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -\fIHHHH\fP (one to four hex digits) -.TP -.B \eU\fIHHHHHHHH\fP -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -\fIHHHHHHHH\fP (one to eight hex digits) -.TP -.B \ec\fIx\fP -a control-\fIx\fP character -.PD -.RE -.LP -The expanded result is single-quoted, as if the dollar sign had -not been present. -.PP -A double-quoted string preceded by a dollar sign (\fB$\fP\(dq\fIstring\fP\(dq) -will cause the string to be translated according to the current locale. -If the current locale is \fBC\fP or \fBPOSIX\fP, the dollar sign -is ignored. -If the string is translated and replaced, the replacement is -double-quoted. -.SH PARAMETERS -A -.I parameter -is an entity that stores values. -It can be a -.IR name , -a number, or one of the special characters listed below under -.BR "Special Parameters" . -A -.I variable -is a parameter denoted by a -.IR name . -A variable has a \fIvalue\fP and zero or more \fIattributes\fP. -Attributes are assigned using the -.B declare -builtin command (see -.B declare -below in -.SM -.BR "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" ). -.PP -A parameter is set if it has been assigned a value. The null string is -a valid value. Once a variable is set, it may be unset only by using -the -.B unset -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.PP -A -.I variable -may be assigned to by a statement of the form -.RS -.PP -\fIname\fP=[\fIvalue\fP] -.RE -.PP -If -.I value -is not given, the variable is assigned the null string. All -.I values -undergo tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote -removal (see -.SM -.B EXPANSION -below). If the variable has its -.B integer -attribute set, then -.I value -is evaluated as an arithmetic expression even if the $((...)) expansion is -not used (see -.B "Arithmetic Expansion" -below). -Word splitting is not performed, with the exception -of \fB"$@"\fP as explained below under -.BR "Special Parameters" . -Pathname expansion is not performed. -Assignment statements may also appear as arguments to the -.BR alias , -.BR declare , -.BR typeset , -.BR export , -.BR readonly , -and -.B local -builtin commands. -When in \fIposix mode\fP, these builtins may appear in a command after -one or more instances of the \fBcommand\fP builtin and retain these -assignment statement properties. -.PP -In the context where an assignment statement is assigning a value -to a shell variable or array index, the += operator can be used to -append to or add to the variable's previous value. -When += is applied to a variable for which the \fIinteger\fP attribute has been -set, \fIvalue\fP is evaluated as an arithmetic expression and added to the -variable's current value, which is also evaluated. -When += is applied to an array variable using compound assignment (see -.B Arrays -below), the -variable's value is not unset (as it is when using =), and new values are -appended to the array beginning at one greater than the array's maximum index -(for indexed arrays) or added as additional key\-value pairs in an -associative array. -When applied to a string-valued variable, \fIvalue\fP is expanded and -appended to the variable's value. -.PP -A variable can be assigned the \fInameref\fP attribute using the -\fB\-n\fP option to the \fBdeclare\fP or \fBlocal\fP builtin commands -(see the descriptions of \fBdeclare\fP and \fBlocal\fP below) -to create a \fInameref\fP, or a reference to another variable. -This allows variables to be manipulated indirectly. -Whenever the nameref variable is referenced or assigned to, the operation -is actually performed on the variable specified by the nameref variable's -value. -A nameref is commonly used within shell functions to refer to a variable -whose name is passed as an argument to the function. -For instance, if a variable name is passed to a shell function as its first -argument, running -.sp .5 -.RS -.if t \f(CWdeclare -n ref=$1\fP -.if n declare -n ref=$1 -.RE -.sp .5 -inside the function creates a nameref variable \fBref\fP whose value is -the variable name passed as the first argument. -References and assignments to \fBref\fP are treated as references and -assignments to the variable whose name was passed as \fB$1\fP. -If the control variable in a \fBfor\fP loop has the nameref attribute, -the list of words can be a list of shell variables, and a name reference -will be established for each word in the list, in turn, when the loop is -executed. -Array variables cannot be given the \fB\-n\fP attribute. -However, nameref variables can reference array variables and subscripted -array variables. -Namerefs can be unset using the \fB\-n\fP option to the \fBunset\fP builtin. -Otherwise, if \fBunset\fP is executed with the name of a nameref variable -as an argument, the variable referenced by the nameref variable will be unset. -.SS Positional Parameters -.PP -A -.I positional parameter -is a parameter denoted by one or more -digits, other than the single digit 0. Positional parameters are -assigned from the shell's arguments when it is invoked, -and may be reassigned using the -.B set -builtin command. Positional parameters may not be assigned to -with assignment statements. The positional parameters are -temporarily replaced when a shell function is executed (see -.SM -.B FUNCTIONS -below). -.PP -When a positional parameter consisting of more than a single -digit is expanded, it must be enclosed in braces (see -.SM -.B EXPANSION -below). -.SS Special Parameters -.PP -The shell treats several parameters specially. These parameters may -only be referenced; assignment to them is not allowed. -.PD 0 -.TP -.B * -Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one. When the -expansion occurs within double quotes, it expands to a single word -with the value of each parameter separated by the first character -of the -.SM -.B IFS -special variable. That is, "\fB$*\fP" is equivalent -to "\fB$1\fP\fIc\fP\fB$2\fP\fIc\fP\fB...\fP", where -.I c -is the first character of the value of the -.SM -.B IFS -variable. If -.SM -.B IFS -is unset, the parameters are separated by spaces. -If -.SM -.B IFS -is null, the parameters are joined without intervening separators. -.TP -.B @ -Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one. When the -expansion occurs within double quotes, each parameter expands to a -separate word. That is, "\fB$@\fP" is equivalent to -"\fB$1\fP" "\fB$2\fP" ... -If the double-quoted expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of -the first parameter is joined with the beginning part of the original -word, and the expansion of the last parameter is joined with the last -part of the original word. -When there are no positional parameters, "\fB$@\fP" and -.B $@ -expand to nothing (i.e., they are removed). -.TP -.B # -Expands to the number of positional parameters in decimal. -.TP -.B ? -Expands to the exit status of the most recently executed foreground -pipeline. -.TP -.B \- -Expands to the current option flags as specified upon invocation, -by the -.B set -builtin command, or those set by the shell itself -(such as the -.B \-i -option). -.TP -.B $ -Expands to the process ID of the shell. In a () subshell, it -expands to the process ID of the current shell, not the -subshell. -.TP -.B ! -Expands to the process ID of the job most recently placed into the -background, whether executed as an asynchronous command or using -the \fBbg\fP builtin (see -.SM -.B "JOB CONTROL" -below). -.TP -.B 0 -Expands to the name of the shell or shell script. This is set at -shell initialization. If -.B bash -is invoked with a file of commands, -.B $0 -is set to the name of that file. If -.B bash -is started with the -.B \-c -option, then -.B $0 -is set to the first argument after the string to be -executed, if one is present. Otherwise, it is set -to the filename used to invoke -.BR bash , -as given by argument zero. -.TP -.B _ -At shell startup, set to the absolute pathname used to invoke the -shell or shell script being executed as passed in the environment -or argument list. -Subsequently, expands to the last argument to the previous command, -after expansion. -Also set to the full pathname used to invoke each command executed -and placed in the environment exported to that command. -When checking mail, this parameter holds the name of the mail file -currently being checked. -.PD -.SS Shell Variables -.PP -The following variables are set by the shell: -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B BASH -Expands to the full filename used to invoke this instance of -.BR bash . -.TP -.B BASHOPTS -A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in -the list is a valid argument for the -.B \-s -option to the -.B shopt -builtin command (see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). The options appearing in -.SM -.B BASHOPTS -are those reported as -.I on -by \fBshopt\fP. -If this variable is in the environment when -.B bash -starts up, each shell option in the list will be enabled before -reading any startup files. -This variable is read-only. -.TP -.B BASHPID -Expands to the process ID of the current \fBbash\fP process. -This differs from \fB$$\fP under certain circumstances, such as subshells -that do not require \fBbash\fP to be re-initialized. -.TP -.B BASH_ALIASES -An associative array variable whose members correspond to the internal -list of aliases as maintained by the \fBalias\fP builtin. -Elements added to this array appear in the alias list; unsetting array -elements cause aliases to be removed from the alias list. -.TP -.B BASH_ARGC -An array variable whose values are the number of parameters in each -frame of the current \fBbash\fP execution call stack. -The number of -parameters to the current subroutine (shell function or script executed -with \fB.\fP or \fBsource\fP) is at the top of the stack. -When a subroutine is executed, the number of parameters passed is pushed onto -.SM -.BR BASH_ARGC . -The shell sets -.SM -.B BASH_ARGC -only when in extended debugging mode (see the description of the -.B extdebug -option to the -.B shopt -builtin below) -.TP -.B BASH_ARGV -An array variable containing all of the parameters in the current \fBbash\fP -execution call stack. The final parameter of the last subroutine call -is at the top of the stack; the first parameter of the initial call is -at the bottom. When a subroutine is executed, the parameters supplied -are pushed onto -.SM -.BR BASH_ARGV . -The shell sets -.SM -.B BASH_ARGV -only when in extended debugging mode -(see the description of the -.B extdebug -option to the -.B shopt -builtin below) -.TP -.B BASH_CMDS -An associative array variable whose members correspond to the internal -hash table of commands as maintained by the \fBhash\fP builtin. -Elements added to this array appear in the hash table; unsetting array -elements cause commands to be removed from the hash table. -.TP -.B BASH_COMMAND -The command currently being executed or about to be executed, unless the -shell is executing a command as the result of a trap, -in which case it is the command executing at the time of the trap. -.TP -.B BASH_EXECUTION_STRING -The command argument to the \fB\-c\fP invocation option. -.TP -.B BASH_LINENO -An array variable whose members are the line numbers in source files -where each corresponding member of -.SM -.B FUNCNAME -was invoked. -\fB${BASH_LINENO[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP is the line number in the source -file (\fB${BASH_SOURCE[\fP\fI$i+1\fP\fB]}\fP) where -\fB${FUNCNAME[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP was called -(or \fB${BASH_LINENO[\fP\fI$i-1\fP\fB]}\fP if referenced within another -shell function). -Use -.SM -.B LINENO -to obtain the current line number. -.TP -.B BASH_REMATCH -An array variable whose members are assigned by the \fB=~\fP binary -operator to the \fB[[\fP conditional command. -The element with index 0 is the portion of the string -matching the entire regular expression. -The element with index \fIn\fP is the portion of the -string matching the \fIn\fPth parenthesized subexpression. -This variable is read-only. -.TP -.B BASH_SOURCE -An array variable whose members are the source filenames -where the corresponding shell function names in the -.SM -.B FUNCNAME -array variable are defined. -The shell function -\fB${FUNCNAME[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP is defined in the file -\fB${BASH_SOURCE[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP and called from -\fB${BASH_SOURCE[\fP\fI$i+1\fP\fB]}\fP. -.TP -.B BASH_SUBSHELL -Incremented by one within each subshell or subshell environment when -the shell begins executing in that environment. -The initial value is 0. -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO -A readonly array variable whose members hold version information for -this instance of -.BR bash . -The values assigned to the array members are as follows: -.sp .5 -.RS -.TP 24 -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR0\fP] -The major version number (the \fIrelease\fP). -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR1\fP] -The minor version number (the \fIversion\fP). -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR2\fP] -The patch level. -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR3\fP] -The build version. -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR4\fP] -The release status (e.g., \fIbeta1\fP). -.TP -.B BASH_VERSINFO[\fR5\fP] -The value of -.SM -.BR MACHTYPE . -.RE -.TP -.B BASH_VERSION -Expands to a string describing the version of this instance of -.BR bash . -.TP -.B COMP_CWORD -An index into \fB${COMP_WORDS}\fP of the word containing the current -cursor position. -This variable is available only in shell functions invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP -below). -.TP -.B COMP_KEY -The key (or final key of a key sequence) used to invoke the current -completion function. -.TP -.B COMP_LINE -The current command line. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP -below). -.TP -.B COMP_POINT -The index of the current cursor position relative to the beginning of -the current command. -If the current cursor position is at the end of the current command, -the value of this variable is equal to \fB${#COMP_LINE}\fP. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP -below). -.TP -.B COMP_TYPE -Set to an integer value corresponding to the type of completion attempted -that caused a completion function to be called: -\fITAB\fP, for normal completion, -\fI?\fP, for listing completions after successive tabs, -\fI!\fP, for listing alternatives on partial word completion, -\fI@\fP, to list completions if the word is not unmodified, -or -\fI%\fP, for menu completion. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP -below). -.TP -.B COMP_WORDBREAKS -The set of characters that the \fBreadline\fP library treats as word -separators when performing word completion. -If -.SM -.B COMP_WORDBREAKS -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B COMP_WORDS -An array variable (see \fBArrays\fP below) consisting of the individual -words in the current command line. -The line is split into words as \fBreadline\fP would split it, using -.SM -.B COMP_WORDBREAKS -as described above. -This variable is available only in shell functions invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP -below). -.TP -.B COPROC -An array variable (see \fBArrays\fP below) created to hold the file descriptors -for output from and input to an unnamed coprocess (see \fBCoprocesses\fP -above). -.TP -.B DIRSTACK -An array variable (see -.B Arrays -below) containing the current contents of the directory stack. -Directories appear in the stack in the order they are displayed by the -.B dirs -builtin. -Assigning to members of this array variable may be used to modify -directories already in the stack, but the -.B pushd -and -.B popd -builtins must be used to add and remove directories. -Assignment to this variable will not change the current directory. -If -.SM -.B DIRSTACK -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B EUID -Expands to the effective user ID of the current user, initialized at -shell startup. This variable is readonly. -.TP -.B FUNCNAME -An array variable containing the names of all shell functions -currently in the execution call stack. -The element with index 0 is the name of any currently-executing -shell function. -The bottom-most element (the one with the highest index) is -.if t \f(CW"main"\fP. -.if n "main". -This variable exists only when a shell function is executing. -Assignments to -.SM -.B FUNCNAME -have no effect and return an error status. -If -.SM -.B FUNCNAME -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -This variable can be used with \fBBASH_LINENO\fP and \fBBASH_SOURCE\fP. -Each element of \fBFUNCNAME\fP has corresponding elements in -\fBBASH_LINENO\fP and \fBBASH_SOURCE\fP to describe the call stack. -For instance, \fB${FUNCNAME[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP was called from the file -\fB${BASH_SOURCE[\fP\fI$i+1\fP\fB]}\fP at line number -\fB${BASH_LINENO[\fP\fI$i\fP\fB]}\fP. -The \fBcaller\fP builtin displays the current call stack using this -information. -.TP -.B GROUPS -An array variable containing the list of groups of which the current -user is a member. -Assignments to -.SM -.B GROUPS -have no effect and return an error status. -If -.SM -.B GROUPS -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B HISTCMD -The history number, or index in the history list, of the current -command. -If -.SM -.B HISTCMD -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B HOSTNAME -Automatically set to the name of the current host. -.TP -.B HOSTTYPE -Automatically set to a string that uniquely -describes the type of machine on which -.B bash -is executing. -The default is system-dependent. -.TP -.B LINENO -Each time this parameter is referenced, the shell substitutes -a decimal number representing the current sequential line number -(starting with 1) within a script or function. When not in a -script or function, the value substituted is not guaranteed to -be meaningful. -If -.SM -.B LINENO -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B MACHTYPE -Automatically set to a string that fully describes the system -type on which -.B bash -is executing, in the standard GNU \fIcpu-company-system\fP format. -The default is system-dependent. -.TP -.B MAPFILE -An array variable (see \fBArrays\fP below) created to hold the text -read by the \fBmapfile\fP builtin when no variable name is supplied. -.TP -.B OLDPWD -The previous working directory as set by the -.B cd -command. -.TP -.B OPTARG -The value of the last option argument processed by the -.B getopts -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.TP -.B OPTIND -The index of the next argument to be processed by the -.B getopts -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.TP -.B OSTYPE -Automatically set to a string that -describes the operating system on which -.B bash -is executing. -The default is system-dependent. -.TP -.B PIPESTATUS -An array variable (see -.B Arrays -below) containing a list of exit status values from the processes -in the most-recently-executed foreground pipeline (which may -contain only a single command). -.TP -.B PPID -The process ID of the shell's parent. This variable is readonly. -.TP -.B PWD -The current working directory as set by the -.B cd -command. -.TP -.B RANDOM -Each time this parameter is referenced, a random integer between -0 and 32767 is -generated. The sequence of random numbers may be initialized by assigning -a value to -.SM -.BR RANDOM . -If -.SM -.B RANDOM -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B READLINE_LINE -The contents of the -.B readline -line buffer, for use with -.if t \f(CWbind -x\fP -.if n "bind -x" -(see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). -.TP -.B READLINE_POINT -The position of the insertion point in the -.B readline -line buffer, for use with -.if t \f(CWbind -x\fP -.if n "bind -x" -(see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). -.TP -.B REPLY -Set to the line of input read by the -.B read -builtin command when no arguments are supplied. -.TP -.B SECONDS -Each time this parameter is -referenced, the number of seconds since shell invocation is returned. If a -value is assigned to -.SM -.BR SECONDS , -the value returned upon subsequent -references is -the number of seconds since the assignment plus the value assigned. -If -.SM -.B SECONDS -is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. -.TP -.B SHELLOPTS -A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in -the list is a valid argument for the -.B \-o -option to the -.B set -builtin command (see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). The options appearing in -.SM -.B SHELLOPTS -are those reported as -.I on -by \fBset \-o\fP. -If this variable is in the environment when -.B bash -starts up, each shell option in the list will be enabled before -reading any startup files. -This variable is read-only. -.TP -.B SHLVL -Incremented by one each time an instance of -.B bash -is started. -.TP -.B UID -Expands to the user ID of the current user, initialized at shell startup. -This variable is readonly. -.PD -.PP -The following variables are used by the shell. In some cases, -.B bash -assigns a default value to a variable; these cases are noted -below. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B BASH_COMPAT -The value is used to set the shell's compatibility level. -See the description of the \fBshopt\fP builtin below under -\fBSHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS\fP -for a description of the various compatibility -levels and their effects. -The value may be a decimal number (e.g., 4.2) or an integer (e.g., 42) -corresponding to the desired compatibility level. -If \fBBASH_COMPAT\fP is unset or set to the empty string, the compatibility -level is set to the default for the current version. -If \fBBASH_COMPAT\fP is set to a value that is not one of the valid -compatibility levels, the shell prints an error message and sets the -compatibility level to the default for the current version. -The valid compatibility levels correspond to the compatibility options -accepted by the \fBshopt\fP builtin described below (for example, -\fBcompat42\fP means that 4.2 and 42 are valid values). -The current version is also a valid value. -.TP -.B BASH_ENV -If this parameter is set when \fBbash\fP is executing a shell script, -its value is interpreted as a filename containing commands to -initialize the shell, as in -.IR ~/.bashrc . -The value of -.SM -.B BASH_ENV -is subjected to parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic -expansion before being interpreted as a filename. -.SM -.B PATH -is not used to search for the resultant filename. -.TP -.B BASH_XTRACEFD -If set to an integer corresponding to a valid file descriptor, \fBbash\fP -will write the trace output generated when -.if t \f(CWset -x\fP -.if n \fIset -x\fP -is enabled to that file descriptor. -The file descriptor is closed when -.SM -.B BASH_XTRACEFD -is unset or assigned a new value. -Unsetting -.SM -.B BASH_XTRACEFD -or assigning it the empty string causes the -trace output to be sent to the standard error. -Note that setting -.SM -.B BASH_XTRACEFD -to 2 (the standard error file -descriptor) and then unsetting it will result in the standard error -being closed. -.TP -.B CDPATH -The search path for the -.B cd -command. -This is a colon-separated list of directories in which the shell looks -for destination directories specified by the -.B cd -command. -A sample value is -.if t \f(CW".:~:/usr"\fP. -.if n ".:~:/usr". -.TP -.B CHILD_MAX -Set the number of exited child status values for the shell to remember. -Bash will not allow this value to be decreased below a POSIX-mandated -minimum, and there is a maximum value (currently 8192) that this may -not exceed. -The minimum value is system-dependent. -.TP -.B COLUMNS -Used by the \fBselect\fP compound command to determine the terminal width -when printing selection lists. -Automatically set if the -.B checkwinsize -option is enabled or in an interactive shell upon receipt of a -.SM -.BR SIGWINCH . -.TP -.B COMPREPLY -An array variable from which \fBbash\fP reads the possible completions -generated by a shell function invoked by the programmable completion -facility (see \fBProgrammable Completion\fP below). -Each array element contains one possible completion. -.TP -.B EMACS -If \fBbash\fP finds this variable in the environment when the shell starts -with value -.if t \f(CWt\fP, -.if n "t", -it assumes that the shell is running in an Emacs shell buffer and disables -line editing. -.TP -.B ENV -Similar to -.SM -.BR BASH_ENV ; -used when the shell is invoked in POSIX mode. -.TP -.B FCEDIT -The default editor for the -.B fc -builtin command. -.TP -.B FIGNORE -A colon-separated list of suffixes to ignore when performing -filename completion (see -.SM -.B READLINE -below). -A filename whose suffix matches one of the entries in -.SM -.B FIGNORE -is excluded from the list of matched filenames. -A sample value is -.if t \f(CW".o:~"\fP. -.if n ".o:~". -.TP -.B FUNCNEST -If set to a numeric value greater than 0, defines a maximum function -nesting level. Function invocations that exceed this nesting level -will cause the current command to abort. -.TP -.B GLOBIGNORE -A colon-separated list of patterns defining the set of filenames to -be ignored by pathname expansion. -If a filename matched by a pathname expansion pattern also matches one -of the patterns in -.SM -.BR GLOBIGNORE , -it is removed from the list of matches. -.TP -.B HISTCONTROL -A colon-separated list of values controlling how commands are saved on -the history list. -If the list of values includes -.IR ignorespace , -lines which begin with a -.B space -character are not saved in the history list. -A value of -.I ignoredups -causes lines matching the previous history entry to not be saved. -A value of -.I ignoreboth -is shorthand for \fIignorespace\fP and \fIignoredups\fP. -A value of -.IR erasedups -causes all previous lines matching the current line to be removed from -the history list before that line is saved. -Any value not in the above list is ignored. -If -.SM -.B HISTCONTROL -is unset, or does not include a valid value, -all lines read by the shell parser are saved on the history list, -subject to the value of -.SM -.BR HISTIGNORE . -The second and subsequent lines of a multi-line compound command are -not tested, and are added to the history regardless of the value of -.SM -.BR HISTCONTROL . -.TP -.B HISTFILE -The name of the file in which command history is saved (see -.SM -.B HISTORY -below). The default value is \fI~/.bash_history\fP. If unset, the -command history is not saved when a shell exits. -.TP -.B HISTFILESIZE -The maximum number of lines contained in the history file. When this -variable is assigned a value, the history file is truncated, if -necessary, -to contain no more than that number of lines by removing the oldest entries. -The history file is also truncated to this size after -writing it when a shell exits. -If the value is 0, the history file is truncated to zero size. -Non-numeric values and numeric values less than zero inhibit truncation. -The shell sets the default value to the value of \fBHISTSIZE\fP -after reading any startup files. -.TP -.B HISTIGNORE -A colon-separated list of patterns used to decide which command lines -should be saved on the history list. Each pattern is anchored at the -beginning of the line and must match the complete line (no implicit -`\fB*\fP' is appended). Each pattern is tested against the line -after the checks specified by -.SM -.B HISTCONTROL -are applied. -In addition to the normal shell pattern matching characters, `\fB&\fP' -matches the previous history line. `\fB&\fP' may be escaped using a -backslash; the backslash is removed before attempting a match. -The second and subsequent lines of a multi-line compound command are -not tested, and are added to the history regardless of the value of -.SM -.BR HISTIGNORE . -.TP -.B HISTSIZE -The number of commands to remember in the command history (see -.SM -.B HISTORY -below). -If the value is 0, commands are not saved in the history list. -Numeric values less than zero result in every command being saved -on the history list (there is no limit). -The shell sets the default value to 500 after reading any startup files. -.TP -.B HISTTIMEFORMAT -If this variable is set and not null, its value is used as a format string -for \fIstrftime\fP(3) to print the time stamp associated with each history -entry displayed by the \fBhistory\fP builtin. -If this variable is set, time stamps are written to the history file so -they may be preserved across shell sessions. -This uses the history comment character to distinguish timestamps from -other history lines. -.TP -.B HOME -The home directory of the current user; the default argument for the -\fBcd\fP builtin command. -The value of this variable is also used when performing tilde expansion. -.TP -.B HOSTFILE -Contains the name of a file in the same format as -.FN /etc/hosts -that should be read when the shell needs to complete a -hostname. -The list of possible hostname completions may be changed while the -shell is running; -the next time hostname completion is attempted after the -value is changed, -.B bash -adds the contents of the new file to the existing list. -If -.SM -.B HOSTFILE -is set, but has no value, or does not name a readable file, -\fBbash\fP attempts to read -.FN /etc/hosts -to obtain the list of possible hostname completions. -When -.SM -.B HOSTFILE -is unset, the hostname list is cleared. -.TP -.B IFS -The -.I Internal Field Separator -that is used -for word splitting after expansion and to -split lines into words with the -.B read -builtin command. The default value is -``''. -.TP -.B IGNOREEOF -Controls the -action of an interactive shell on receipt of an -.SM -.B EOF -character as the sole input. If set, the value is the number of -consecutive -.SM -.B EOF -characters which must be -typed as the first characters on an input line before -.B bash -exits. If the variable exists but does not have a numeric value, or -has no value, the default value is 10. If it does not exist, -.SM -.B EOF -signifies the end of input to the shell. -.TP -.B INPUTRC -The filename for the -.B readline -startup file, overriding the default of -.FN ~/.inputrc -(see -.SM -.B READLINE -below). -.TP -.B LANG -Used to determine the locale category for any category not specifically -selected with a variable starting with \fBLC_\fP. -.TP -.B LC_ALL -This variable overrides the value of -.SM -.B LANG -and any other -\fBLC_\fP variable specifying a locale category. -.TP -.B LC_COLLATE -This variable determines the collation order used when sorting the -results of pathname expansion, and determines the behavior of range -expressions, equivalence classes, and collating sequences within -pathname expansion and pattern matching. -.TP -.B LC_CTYPE -This variable determines the interpretation of characters and the -behavior of character classes within pathname expansion and pattern -matching. -.TP -.B LC_MESSAGES -This variable determines the locale used to translate double-quoted -strings preceded by a \fB$\fP. -.TP -.B LC_NUMERIC -This variable determines the locale category used for number formatting. -.TP -.B LINES -Used by the \fBselect\fP compound command to determine the column length -for printing selection lists. -Automatically set if the -.B checkwinsize -option is enabled or in an interactive shell upon receipt of a -.SM -.BR SIGWINCH . -.TP -.B MAIL -If this parameter is set to a file or directory name and the -.SM -.B MAILPATH -variable is not set, -.B bash -informs the user of the arrival of mail in the specified file or -Maildir-format directory. -.TP -.B MAILCHECK -Specifies how -often (in seconds) -.B bash -checks for mail. The default is 60 seconds. When it is time to check -for mail, the shell does so before displaying the primary prompt. -If this variable is unset, or set to a value that is not a number -greater than or equal to zero, the shell disables mail checking. -.TP -.B MAILPATH -A colon-separated list of filenames to be checked for mail. -The message to be printed when mail arrives in a particular file -may be specified by separating the filename from the message with a `?'. -When used in the text of the message, \fB$_\fP expands to the name of -the current mailfile. -Example: -.RS -.PP -\fBMAILPATH\fP=\(aq/var/mail/bfox?"You have mail":~/shell\-mail?"$_ has mail!"\(aq -.PP -.B Bash -supplies a default value for this variable, but the location of the user -mail files that it uses is system dependent (e.g., /var/mail/\fB$USER\fP). -.RE -.TP -.B OPTERR -If set to the value 1, -.B bash -displays error messages generated by the -.B getopts -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.SM -.B OPTERR -is initialized to 1 each time the shell is invoked or a shell -script is executed. -.TP -.B PATH -The search path for commands. It -is a colon-separated list of directories in which -the shell looks for commands (see -.SM -.B COMMAND EXECUTION -below). -A zero-length (null) directory name in the value of -.SM -.B PATH -indicates the current directory. -A null directory name may appear as two adjacent colons, or as an initial -or trailing colon. -The default path is system-dependent, -and is set by the administrator who installs -.BR bash . -A common value is -.if t \f(CW/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin\fP. -.if n ``/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin''. -.TP -.B POSIXLY_CORRECT -If this variable is in the environment when \fBbash\fP starts, the shell -enters \fIposix mode\fP before reading the startup files, as if the -.B \-\-posix -invocation option had been supplied. If it is set while the shell is -running, \fBbash\fP enables \fIposix mode\fP, as if the command -.if t \f(CWset -o posix\fP -.if n \fIset -o posix\fP -had been executed. -.TP -.B PROMPT_COMMAND -If set, the value is executed as a command prior to issuing each primary -prompt. -.TP -.B PROMPT_DIRTRIM -If set to a number greater than zero, the value is used as the number of -trailing directory components to retain when expanding the \fB\ew\fP and -\fB\eW\fP prompt string escapes (see -.SM -.B PROMPTING -below). Characters removed are replaced with an ellipsis. -.TP -.B PS1 -The value of this parameter is expanded (see -.SM -.B PROMPTING -below) and used as the primary prompt string. The default value is -``\fB\es\-\ev\e$ \fP''. -.TP -.B PS2 -The value of this parameter is expanded as with -.SM -.B PS1 -and used as the secondary prompt string. The default is -``\fB> \fP''. -.TP -.B PS3 -The value of this parameter is used as the prompt for the -.B select -command (see -.SM -.B SHELL GRAMMAR -above). -.TP -.B PS4 -The value of this parameter is expanded as with -.SM -.B PS1 -and the value is printed before each command -.B bash -displays during an execution trace. The first character of -.SM -.B PS4 -is replicated multiple times, as necessary, to indicate multiple -levels of indirection. The default is ``\fB+ \fP''. -.TP -.B SHELL -The full pathname to the shell is kept in this environment variable. -If it is not set when the shell starts, -.B bash -assigns to it the full pathname of the current user's login shell. -.TP -.B TIMEFORMAT -The value of this parameter is used as a format string specifying -how the timing information for pipelines prefixed with the -.B time -reserved word should be displayed. -The \fB%\fP character introduces an escape sequence that is -expanded to a time value or other information. -The escape sequences and their meanings are as follows; the -braces denote optional portions. -.sp .5 -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP 10 -.B %% -A literal \fB%\fP. -.TP -.B %[\fIp\fP][l]R -The elapsed time in seconds. -.TP -.B %[\fIp\fP][l]U -The number of CPU seconds spent in user mode. -.TP -.B %[\fIp\fP][l]S -The number of CPU seconds spent in system mode. -.TP -.B %P -The CPU percentage, computed as (%U + %S) / %R. -.PD -.RE -.IP -The optional \fIp\fP is a digit specifying the \fIprecision\fP, -the number of fractional digits after a decimal point. -A value of 0 causes no decimal point or fraction to be output. -At most three places after the decimal point may be specified; -values of \fIp\fP greater than 3 are changed to 3. -If \fIp\fP is not specified, the value 3 is used. -.IP -The optional \fBl\fP specifies a longer format, including -minutes, of the form \fIMM\fPm\fISS\fP.\fIFF\fPs. -The value of \fIp\fP determines whether or not the fraction is -included. -.IP -If this variable is not set, \fBbash\fP acts as if it had the -value \fB$\(aq\enreal\et%3lR\enuser\et%3lU\ensys\ett%3lS\(aq\fP. -If the value is null, no timing information is displayed. -A trailing newline is added when the format string is displayed. -.PD 0 -.TP -.B TMOUT -If set to a value greater than zero, -.SM -.B TMOUT -is treated as the -default timeout for the \fBread\fP builtin. -The \fBselect\fP command terminates if input does not arrive -after -.SM -.B TMOUT -seconds when input is coming from a terminal. -In an interactive shell, the value is interpreted as the -number of seconds to wait for a line of input after issuing the -primary prompt. -.B Bash -terminates after waiting for that number of seconds if a complete -line of input does not arrive. -.TP -.B TMPDIR -If set, \fBbash\fP uses its value as the name of a directory in which -\fBbash\fP creates temporary files for the shell's use. -.TP -.B auto_resume -This variable controls how the shell interacts with the user and -job control. If this variable is set, single word simple -commands without redirections are treated as candidates for resumption -of an existing stopped job. There is no ambiguity allowed; if there is -more than one job beginning with the string typed, the job most recently -accessed is selected. The -.I name -of a stopped job, in this context, is the command line used to -start it. -If set to the value -.IR exact , -the string supplied must match the name of a stopped job exactly; -if set to -.IR substring , -the string supplied needs to match a substring of the name of a -stopped job. The -.I substring -value provides functionality analogous to the -.B %? -job identifier (see -.SM -.B JOB CONTROL -below). If set to any other value, the supplied string must -be a prefix of a stopped job's name; this provides functionality -analogous to the \fB%\fP\fIstring\fP job identifier. -.TP -.B histchars -The two or three characters which control history expansion -and tokenization (see -.SM -.B HISTORY EXPANSION -below). The first character is the \fIhistory expansion\fP character, -the character which signals the start of a history -expansion, normally `\fB!\fP'. -The second character is the \fIquick substitution\fP -character, which is used as shorthand for re-running the previous -command entered, substituting one string for another in the command. -The default is `\fB^\fP'. -The optional third character is the character -which indicates that the remainder of the line is a comment when found -as the first character of a word, normally `\fB#\fP'. The history -comment character causes history substitution to be skipped for the -remaining words on the line. It does not necessarily cause the shell -parser to treat the rest of the line as a comment. -.PD -.SS Arrays -.B Bash -provides one-dimensional indexed and associative array variables. -Any variable may be used as an indexed array; the -.B declare -builtin will explicitly declare an array. -There is no maximum -limit on the size of an array, nor any requirement that members -be indexed or assigned contiguously. -Indexed arrays are referenced using integers (including arithmetic -expressions) and are zero-based; associative arrays are referenced -using arbitrary strings. -Unless otherwise noted, indexed array indices must be non-negative integers. -.PP -An indexed array is created automatically if any variable is assigned to -using the syntax \fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP]=\fIvalue\fP. The -.I subscript -is treated as an arithmetic expression that must evaluate to a number. -To explicitly declare an indexed array, use -.B declare \-a \fIname\fP -(see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.B declare \-a \fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP] -is also accepted; the \fIsubscript\fP is ignored. -.PP -Associative arrays are created using -.BR "declare \-A \fIname\fP" . -.PP -Attributes may be -specified for an array variable using the -.B declare -and -.B readonly -builtins. Each attribute applies to all members of an array. -.PP -Arrays are assigned to using compound assignments of the form -\fIname\fP=\fB(\fPvalue\fI1\fP ... value\fIn\fP\fB)\fP, where each -\fIvalue\fP is of the form [\fIsubscript\fP]=\fIstring\fP. -Indexed array assignments do not require anything but \fIstring\fP. -When assigning to indexed arrays, if the optional brackets and subscript -are supplied, that index is assigned to; -otherwise the index of the element assigned is the last index assigned -to by the statement plus one. Indexing starts at zero. -.PP -When assigning to an associative array, the subscript is required. -.PP -This syntax is also accepted by the -.B declare -builtin. Individual array elements may be assigned to using the -\fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP]=\fIvalue\fP syntax introduced above. -When assigning to an indexed array, if -.I name -is subscripted by a negative number, that number is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of -\fIname\fP, so negative indices count back from the end of the -array, and an index of \-1 references the last element. -.PP -Any element of an array may be referenced using -${\fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP]}. The braces are required to avoid -conflicts with pathname expansion. If -\fIsubscript\fP is \fB@\fP or \fB*\fP, the word expands to -all members of \fIname\fP. These subscripts differ only when the -word appears within double quotes. If the word is double-quoted, -${\fIname\fP[*]} expands to a single -word with the value of each array member separated by the first -character of the -.SM -.B IFS -special variable, and ${\fIname\fP[@]} expands each element of -\fIname\fP to a separate word. When there are no array members, -${\fIname\fP[@]} expands to nothing. -If the double-quoted expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of -the first parameter is joined with the beginning part of the original -word, and the expansion of the last parameter is joined with the last -part of the original word. -This is analogous to the expansion -of the special parameters \fB*\fP and \fB@\fP (see -.B Special Parameters -above). ${#\fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP]} expands to the length of -${\fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP]}. If \fIsubscript\fP is \fB*\fP or -\fB@\fP, the expansion is the number of elements in the array. -Referencing an array variable without a subscript is equivalent to -referencing the array with a subscript of 0. -If the -.I subscript -used to reference an element of an indexed array -evaluates to a number less than zero, it is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of the array, -so negative indices count back from the end of the -array, and an index of \-1 references the last element. -.PP -An array variable is considered set if a subscript has been assigned a -value. The null string is a valid value. -.PP -It is possible to obtain the keys (indices) of an array as well as the values. -${\fB!\fP\fIname\fP[\fI@\fP]} and ${\fB!\fP\fIname\fP[\fI*\fP]} -expand to the indices assigned in array variable \fIname\fP. -The treatment when in double quotes is similar to the expansion of the -special parameters \fI@\fP and \fI*\fP within double quotes. -.PP -The -.B unset -builtin is used to destroy arrays. \fBunset\fP \fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP] -destroys the array element at index \fIsubscript\fP. -Negative subscripts to indexed arrays are interpreted as described above. -Care must be taken to avoid unwanted side effects caused by pathname -expansion. -\fBunset\fP \fIname\fP, where \fIname\fP is an array, or -\fBunset\fP \fIname\fP[\fIsubscript\fP], where -\fIsubscript\fP is \fB*\fP or \fB@\fP, removes the entire array. -.PP -The -.BR declare , -.BR local , -and -.B readonly -builtins each accept a -.B \-a -option to specify an indexed array and a -.B \-A -option to specify an associative array. -If both options are supplied, -.B \-A -takes precedence. -The -.B read -builtin accepts a -.B \-a -option to assign a list of words read from the standard input -to an array. The -.B set -and -.B declare -builtins display array values in a way that allows them to be -reused as assignments. -.SH EXPANSION -Expansion is performed on the command line after it has been split into -words. There are seven kinds of expansion performed: -.IR "brace expansion" , -.IR "tilde expansion" , -.IR "parameter and variable expansion" , -.IR "command substitution" , -.IR "arithmetic expansion" , -.IR "word splitting" , -and -.IR "pathname expansion" . -.PP -The order of expansions is: brace expansion, tilde expansion, -parameter, variable and arithmetic expansion and -command substitution -(done in a left-to-right fashion), word splitting, and pathname -expansion. -.PP -On systems that can support it, there is an additional expansion -available: \fIprocess substitution\fP. -.PP -Only brace expansion, word splitting, and pathname expansion -can change the number of words of the expansion; other expansions -expand a single word to a single word. -The only exceptions to this are the expansions of -"\fB$@\fP" and "\fB${\fP\fIname\fP\fB[@]}\fP" -as explained above (see -.SM -.BR PARAMETERS ). -.SS Brace Expansion -.PP -.I "Brace expansion" -is a mechanism by which arbitrary strings -may be generated. This mechanism is similar to -\fIpathname expansion\fP, but the filenames generated -need not exist. Patterns to be brace expanded take -the form of an optional -.IR preamble , -followed by either a series of comma-separated strings or -a sequence expression between a pair of braces, followed by -an optional -.IR postscript . -The preamble is prefixed to each string contained -within the braces, and the postscript is then appended -to each resulting string, expanding left to right. -.PP -Brace expansions may be nested. The results of each expanded -string are not sorted; left to right order is preserved. -For example, a\fB{\fPd,c,b\fB}\fPe expands into `ade ace abe'. -.PP -A sequence expression takes the form -\fB{\fP\fIx\fP\fB..\fP\fIy\fP\fB[..\fP\fIincr\fP\fB]}\fP, -where \fIx\fP and \fIy\fP are either integers or single characters, -and \fIincr\fP, an optional increment, is an integer. -When integers are supplied, the expression expands to each number between -\fIx\fP and \fIy\fP, inclusive. -Supplied integers may be prefixed with \fI0\fP to force each term to have the -same width. -When either \fIx\fP or \fPy\fP begins with a zero, the shell -attempts to force all generated terms to contain the same number of digits, -zero-padding where necessary. -When characters are supplied, the expression expands to each character -lexicographically between \fIx\fP and \fIy\fP, inclusive, -using the default C locale. -Note that both \fIx\fP and \fIy\fP must be of the same type. -When the increment is supplied, it is used as the difference between -each term. The default increment is 1 or -1 as appropriate. -.PP -Brace expansion is performed before any other expansions, -and any characters special to other expansions are preserved -in the result. It is strictly textual. -.B Bash -does not apply any syntactic interpretation to the context of the -expansion or the text between the braces. -.PP -A correctly-formed brace expansion must contain unquoted opening -and closing braces, and at least one unquoted comma or a valid -sequence expression. -Any incorrectly formed brace expansion is left unchanged. -A \fB{\fP or \fB,\fP may be quoted with a backslash to prevent its -being considered part of a brace expression. -To avoid conflicts with parameter expansion, the string \fB${\fP -is not considered eligible for brace expansion. -.PP -This construct is typically used as shorthand when the common -prefix of the strings to be generated is longer than in the -above example: -.RS -.PP -mkdir /usr/local/src/bash/{old,new,dist,bugs} -.RE -or -.RS -chown root /usr/{ucb/{ex,edit},lib/{ex?.?*,how_ex}} -.RE -.PP -Brace expansion introduces a slight incompatibility with -historical versions of -.BR sh . -.B sh -does not treat opening or closing braces specially when they -appear as part of a word, and preserves them in the output. -.B Bash -removes braces from words as a consequence of brace -expansion. For example, a word entered to -.B sh -as \fIfile{1,2}\fP -appears identically in the output. The same word is -output as -.I file1 file2 -after expansion by -.BR bash . -If strict compatibility with -.B sh -is desired, start -.B bash -with the -.B +B -option or disable brace expansion with the -.B +B -option to the -.B set -command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.SS Tilde Expansion -.PP -If a word begins with an unquoted tilde character (`\fB~\fP'), all of -the characters preceding the first unquoted slash (or all characters, -if there is no unquoted slash) are considered a \fItilde-prefix\fP. -If none of the characters in the tilde-prefix are quoted, the -characters in the tilde-prefix following the tilde are treated as a -possible \fIlogin name\fP. -If this login name is the null string, the tilde is replaced with the -value of the shell parameter -.SM -.BR HOME . -If -.SM -.B HOME -is unset, the home directory of the user executing the shell is -substituted instead. -Otherwise, the tilde-prefix is replaced with the home directory -associated with the specified login name. -.PP -If the tilde-prefix is a `~+', the value of the shell variable -.SM -.B PWD -replaces the tilde-prefix. -If the tilde-prefix is a `~\-', the value of the shell variable -.SM -.BR OLDPWD , -if it is set, is substituted. -If the characters following the tilde in the tilde-prefix consist -of a number \fIN\fP, optionally prefixed -by a `+' or a `\-', the tilde-prefix is replaced with the corresponding -element from the directory stack, as it would be displayed by the -.B dirs -builtin invoked with the tilde-prefix as an argument. -If the characters following the tilde in the tilde-prefix consist of a -number without a leading `+' or `\-', `+' is assumed. -.PP -If the login name is invalid, or the tilde expansion fails, the word -is unchanged. -.PP -Each variable assignment is checked for unquoted tilde-prefixes immediately -following a -.B : -or the first -.BR = . -In these cases, tilde expansion is also performed. -Consequently, one may use filenames with tildes in assignments to -.SM -.BR PATH , -.SM -.BR MAILPATH , -and -.SM -.BR CDPATH , -and the shell assigns the expanded value. -.SS Parameter Expansion -.PP -The `\fB$\fP' character introduces parameter expansion, -command substitution, or arithmetic expansion. The parameter name -or symbol to be expanded may be enclosed in braces, which -are optional but serve to protect the variable to be expanded from -characters immediately following it which could be -interpreted as part of the name. -.PP -When braces are used, the matching ending brace is the first `\fB}\fP' -not escaped by a backslash or within a quoted string, and not within an -embedded arithmetic expansion, command substitution, or parameter -expansion. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP} -The value of \fIparameter\fP is substituted. The braces are required -when -.I parameter -is a positional parameter with more than one digit, -or when -.I parameter -is followed by a character which is not to be -interpreted as part of its name. -The \fIparameter\fP is a shell parameter as described above -\fBPARAMETERS\fP) or an array reference (\fBArrays\fP). -.PD -.PP -If the first character of \fIparameter\fP is an exclamation point (\fB!\fP), -it introduces a level of variable indirection. -\fBBash\fP uses the value of the variable formed from the rest of -\fIparameter\fP as the name of the variable; this variable is then -expanded and that value is used in the rest of the substitution, rather -than the value of \fIparameter\fP itself. -This is known as \fIindirect expansion\fP. -The exceptions to this are the expansions of ${\fB!\fP\fIprefix\fP\fB*\fP} and -${\fB!\fP\fIname\fP[\fI@\fP]} described below. -The exclamation point must immediately follow the left brace in order to -introduce indirection. -.PP -In each of the cases below, \fIword\fP is subject to tilde expansion, -parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. -.PP -When not performing substring expansion, using the forms documented below -(e.g., \fB:-\fP), -\fBbash\fP tests for a parameter that is unset or null. Omitting the colon -results in a test only for a parameter that is unset. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:\-\fP\fIword\fP} -\fBUse Default Values\fP. If -.I parameter -is unset or null, the expansion of -.I word -is substituted. Otherwise, the value of -.I parameter -is substituted. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:=\fP\fIword\fP} -\fBAssign Default Values\fP. -If -.I parameter -is unset or null, the expansion of -.I word -is assigned to -.IR parameter . -The value of -.I parameter -is then substituted. Positional parameters and special parameters may -not be assigned to in this way. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:?\fP\fIword\fP} -\fBDisplay Error if Null or Unset\fP. -If -.I parameter -is null or unset, the expansion of \fIword\fP (or a message to that effect -if -.I word -is not present) is written to the standard error and the shell, if it -is not interactive, exits. Otherwise, the value of \fIparameter\fP is -substituted. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:+\fP\fIword\fP} -\fBUse Alternate Value\fP. -If -.I parameter -is null or unset, nothing is substituted, otherwise the expansion of -.I word -is substituted. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:\fP\fIoffset\fP} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB:\fP\fIoffset\fP\fB:\fP\fIlength\fP} -.PD -\fBSubstring Expansion\fP. -Expands to up to \fIlength\fP characters of the value of \fIparameter\fP -starting at the character specified by \fIoffset\fP. -If \fIparameter\fP is \fB@\fP, an indexed array subscripted by -\fB@\fP or \fB*\fP, or an associative array name, the results differ as -described below. -If \fIlength\fP is omitted, expands to the substring of the value of -\fIparameter\fP starting at the character specified by \fIoffset\fP -and extending to the end of the value. -\fIlength\fP and \fIoffset\fP are arithmetic expressions (see -.SM -.B -ARITHMETIC EVALUATION -below). -.sp 1 -If \fIoffset\fP evaluates to a number less than zero, the value -is used as an offset in characters -from the end of the value of \fIparameter\fP. -If \fIlength\fP evaluates to a number less than zero, -it is interpreted as an offset in characters -from the end of the value of \fIparameter\fP rather than -a number of characters, and the expansion is the characters between -\fIoffset\fP and that result. -Note that a negative offset must be separated from the colon by at least -one space to avoid being confused with the \fB:-\fP expansion. -.sp 1 -If \fIparameter\fP is \fB@\fP, the result is \fIlength\fP positional -parameters beginning at \fIoffset\fP. -A negative \fIoffset\fP is taken relative to one greater than the greatest -positional parameter, so an offset of -1 evaluates to the last positional -parameter. -It is an expansion error if \fIlength\fP evaluates to a number less than -zero. -.sp 1 -If \fIparameter\fP is an indexed array name subscripted by @ or *, -the result is the \fIlength\fP -members of the array beginning with ${\fIparameter\fP[\fIoffset\fP]}. -A negative \fIoffset\fP is taken relative to one greater than the maximum -index of the specified array. -It is an expansion error if \fIlength\fP evaluates to a number less than -zero. -.sp 1 -Substring expansion applied to an associative array produces undefined -results. -.sp 1 -Substring indexing is zero-based unless the positional parameters -are used, in which case the indexing starts at 1 by default. -If \fIoffset\fP is 0, and the positional parameters are used, \fB$0\fP is -prefixed to the list. -.TP -${\fB!\fP\fIprefix\fP\fB*\fP} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fB!\fP\fIprefix\fP\fB@\fP} -.PD -\fBNames matching prefix\fP. -Expands to the names of variables whose names begin with \fIprefix\fP, -separated by the first character of the -.SM -.B IFS -special variable. -When \fI@\fP is used and the expansion appears within double quotes, each -variable name expands to a separate word. -.TP -${\fB!\fP\fIname\fP[\fI@\fP]} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fB!\fP\fIname\fP[\fI*\fP]} -.PD -\fBList of array keys\fP. -If \fIname\fP is an array variable, expands to the list of array indices -(keys) assigned in \fIname\fP. -If \fIname\fP is not an array, expands to 0 if \fIname\fP is set and null -otherwise. -When \fI@\fP is used and the expansion appears within double quotes, each -key expands to a separate word. -.TP -${\fB#\fP\fIparameter\fP} -\fBParameter length\fP. -The length in characters of the value of \fIparameter\fP is substituted. -If -.I parameter -is -.B * -or -.BR @ , -the value substituted is the number of positional parameters. -If -.I parameter -is an array name subscripted by -.B * -or -.BR @ , -the value substituted is the number of elements in the array. -If -.I parameter -is an indexed array name subscripted by a negative number, that number is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of -\fIparameter\fP, so negative indices count back from the end of the -array, and an index of \-1 references the last element. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB#\fP\fIword\fP} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB##\fP\fIword\fP} -.PD -\fBRemove matching prefix pattern\fP. -The -.I word -is expanded to produce a pattern just as in pathname -expansion. If the pattern matches the beginning of -the value of -.IR parameter , -then the result of the expansion is the expanded value of -.I parameter -with the shortest matching pattern (the ``\fB#\fP'' case) or the -longest matching pattern (the ``\fB##\fP'' case) deleted. -If -.I parameter -is -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the pattern removal operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If -.I parameter -is an array variable subscripted with -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the pattern removal operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB%\fP\fIword\fP} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB%%\fP\fIword\fP} -.PD -\fBRemove matching suffix pattern\fP. -The \fIword\fP is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -pathname expansion. -If the pattern matches a trailing portion of the expanded value of -.IR parameter , -then the result of the expansion is the expanded value of -.I parameter -with the shortest matching pattern (the ``\fB%\fP'' case) or the -longest matching pattern (the ``\fB%%\fP'' case) deleted. -If -.I parameter -is -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the pattern removal operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If -.I parameter -is an array variable subscripted with -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the pattern removal operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB/\fP\fIpattern\fP\fB/\fP\fIstring\fP} -\fBPattern substitution\fP. -The \fIpattern\fP is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -pathname expansion. -\fIParameter\fP is expanded and the longest match of \fIpattern\fP -against its value is replaced with \fIstring\fP. -If \fIpattern\fP begins with \fB/\fP, all matches of \fIpattern\fP are -replaced with \fIstring\fP. Normally only the first match is replaced. -If \fIpattern\fP begins with \fB#\fP, it must match at the beginning -of the expanded value of \fIparameter\fP. -If \fIpattern\fP begins with \fB%\fP, it must match at the end -of the expanded value of \fIparameter\fP. -If \fIstring\fP is null, matches of \fIpattern\fP are deleted -and the \fB/\fP following \fIpattern\fP may be omitted. -If -.I parameter -is -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the substitution operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If -.I parameter -is an array variable subscripted with -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the substitution operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB^\fP\fIpattern\fP} -.PD 0 -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB^^\fP\fIpattern\fP} -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB,\fP\fIpattern\fP} -.TP -${\fIparameter\fP\fB,,\fP\fIpattern\fP} -.PD -\fBCase modification\fP. -This expansion modifies the case of alphabetic characters in \fIparameter\fP. -The \fIpattern\fP is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -pathname expansion. -Each character in the expanded value of \fIparameter\fP is tested against -\fIpattern\fP, and, if it matches the pattern, its case is converted. -The pattern should not attempt to match more than one character. -The \fB^\fP operator converts lowercase letters matching \fIpattern\fP -to uppercase; the \fB,\fP operator converts matching uppercase letters -to lowercase. -The \fB^^\fP and \fB,,\fP expansions convert each matched character in the -expanded value; the \fB^\fP and \fB,\fP expansions match and convert only -the first character in the expanded value. -If \fIpattern\fP is omitted, it is treated like a \fB?\fP, which matches -every character. -If -.I parameter -is -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the case modification operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If -.I parameter -is an array variable subscripted with -.B @ -or -.BR * , -the case modification operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -.SS Command Substitution -.PP -\fICommand substitution\fP allows the output of a command to replace -the command name. There are two forms: -.RS -.PP -\fB$(\fP\fIcommand\fP\|\fB)\fP -.RE -or -.RS -\fB\`\fP\fIcommand\fP\fB\`\fP -.RE -.PP -.B Bash -performs the expansion by executing \fIcommand\fP and -replacing the command substitution with the standard output of the -command, with any trailing newlines deleted. -Embedded newlines are not deleted, but they may be removed during -word splitting. -The command substitution \fB$(cat \fIfile\fP)\fR can be replaced by -the equivalent but faster \fB$(< \fIfile\fP)\fR. -.PP -When the old-style backquote form of substitution is used, -backslash retains its literal meaning except when followed by -.BR $ , -.BR \` , -or -.BR \e . -The first backquote not preceded by a backslash terminates the -command substitution. -When using the $(\^\fIcommand\fP\|) form, all characters between the -parentheses make up the command; none are treated specially. -.PP -Command substitutions may be nested. To nest when using the backquoted form, -escape the inner backquotes with backslashes. -.PP -If the substitution appears within double quotes, word splitting and -pathname expansion are not performed on the results. -.SS Arithmetic Expansion -.PP -Arithmetic expansion allows the evaluation of an arithmetic expression -and the substitution of the result. The format for arithmetic expansion is: -.RS -.PP -\fB$((\fP\fIexpression\fP\fB))\fP -.RE -.PP -The -.I expression -is treated as if it were within double quotes, but a double quote -inside the parentheses is not treated specially. -All tokens in the expression undergo parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, and quote removal. -The result is treated as the arithmetic expression to be evaluated. -Arithmetic expansions may be nested. -.PP -The evaluation is performed according to the rules listed below under -.SM -.BR "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" . -If -.I expression -is invalid, -.B bash -prints a message indicating failure and no substitution occurs. -.SS Process Substitution -.PP -\fIProcess substitution\fP is supported on systems that support named -pipes (\fIFIFOs\fP) or the \fB/dev/fd\fP method of naming open files. -It takes the form of -\fB<(\fP\fIlist\^\fP\fB)\fP -or -\fB>(\fP\fIlist\^\fP\fB)\fP. -The process \fIlist\fP is run with its input or output connected to a -\fIFIFO\fP or some file in \fB/dev/fd\fP. The name of this file is -passed as an argument to the current command as the result of the -expansion. If the \fB>(\fP\fIlist\^\fP\fB)\fP form is used, writing to -the file will provide input for \fIlist\fP. If the -\fB<(\fP\fIlist\^\fP\fB)\fP form is used, the file passed as an -argument should be read to obtain the output of \fIlist\fP. -.PP -When available, process substitution is performed -simultaneously with parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, -and arithmetic expansion. -.SS Word Splitting -.PP -The shell scans the results of -parameter expansion, -command substitution, -and -arithmetic expansion -that did not occur within double quotes for -.IR "word splitting" . -.PP -The shell treats each character of -.SM -.B IFS -as a delimiter, and splits the results of the other -expansions into words on these characters. If -.SM -.B IFS -is unset, or its -value is exactly -.BR , -the default, then -sequences of -.BR , -.BR , -and -.B -at the beginning and end of the results of the previous -expansions are ignored, and -any sequence of -.SM -.B IFS -characters not at the beginning or end serves to delimit words. -If -.SM -.B IFS -has a value other than the default, then sequences of -the whitespace characters -.B space -and -.B tab -are ignored at the beginning and end of the -word, as long as the whitespace character is in the -value of -.SM -.BR IFS -(an -.SM -.B IFS -whitespace character). -Any character in -.SM -.B IFS -that is not -.SM -.B IFS -whitespace, along with any adjacent -.SM -.B IFS -whitespace characters, delimits a field. -A sequence of -.SM -.B IFS -whitespace characters is also treated as a delimiter. -If the value of -.SM -.B IFS -is null, no word splitting occurs. -.PP -Explicit null arguments (\^\f3"\^"\fP or \^\f3\(aq\^\(aq\fP\^) are retained. -Unquoted implicit null arguments, resulting from the expansion of -parameters that have no values, are removed. -If a parameter with no value is expanded within double quotes, a -null argument results and is retained. -.PP -Note that if no expansion occurs, no splitting -is performed. -.SS Pathname Expansion -.PP -After word splitting, -unless the -.B \-f -option has been set, -.B bash -scans each word for the characters -.BR * , -.BR ? , -and -.BR [ . -If one of these characters appears, then the word is -regarded as a -.IR pattern , -and replaced with an alphabetically sorted list of -filenames matching the pattern -(see -.SM -.B "Pattern Matching" -below). -If no matching filenames are found, -and the shell option -.B nullglob -is not enabled, the word is left unchanged. -If the -.B nullglob -option is set, and no matches are found, -the word is removed. -If the -.B failglob -shell option is set, and no matches are found, an error message -is printed and the command is not executed. -If the shell option -.B nocaseglob -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -When a pattern is used for pathname expansion, -the character -.B ``.'' -at the start of a name or immediately following a slash -must be matched explicitly, unless the shell option -.B dotglob -is set. -When matching a pathname, the slash character must always be -matched explicitly. -In other cases, the -.B ``.'' -character is not treated specially. -See the description of -.B shopt -below under -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -for a description of the -.BR nocaseglob , -.BR nullglob , -.BR failglob , -and -.B dotglob -shell options. -.PP -The -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -shell variable may be used to restrict the set of filenames matching a -.IR pattern . -If -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -is set, each matching filename that also matches one of the patterns in -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -is removed from the list of matches. -The filenames -.B ``.'' -and -.B ``..'' -are always ignored when -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -is set and not null. However, setting -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -to a non-null value has the effect of enabling the -.B dotglob -shell option, so all other filenames beginning with a -.B ``.'' -will match. -To get the old behavior of ignoring filenames beginning with a -.BR ``.'' , -make -.B ``.*'' -one of the patterns in -.SM -.BR GLOBIGNORE . -The -.B dotglob -option is disabled when -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -is unset. -.PP -\fBPattern Matching\fP -.PP -Any character that appears in a pattern, other than the special pattern -characters described below, matches itself. The NUL character may not -occur in a pattern. A backslash escapes the following character; the -escaping backslash is discarded when matching. -The special pattern characters must be quoted if -they are to be matched literally. -.PP -The special pattern characters have the following meanings: -.PP -.PD 0 -.RS -.TP -.B * -Matches any string, including the null string. -When the \fBglobstar\fP shell option is enabled, and \fB*\fP is used in -a pathname expansion context, two adjacent \fB*\fPs used as a single -pattern will match all files and zero or more directories and -subdirectories. -If followed by a \fB/\fP, two adjacent \fB*\fPs will match only directories -and subdirectories. -.TP -.B ? -Matches any single character. -.TP -.B [...] -Matches any one of the enclosed characters. A pair of characters -separated by a hyphen denotes a -\fIrange expression\fP; -any character that falls between those two characters, inclusive, -using the current locale's collating sequence and character set, -is matched. If the first character following the -.B [ -is a -.B ! -or a -.B ^ -then any character not enclosed is matched. -The sorting order of characters in range expressions is determined by -the current locale and the values of the -.SM -.B LC_COLLATE -or -.SM -.B LC_ALL -shell variables, if set. -To obtain the traditional interpretation of range expressions, where -.B [a\-d] -is equivalent to -.BR [abcd] , -set value of the -.B LC_ALL -shell variable to -.BR C , -or enable the -.B globasciiranges -shell option. -A -.B \- -may be matched by including it as the first or last character -in the set. -A -.B ] -may be matched by including it as the first character -in the set. -.br -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Within -.B [ -and -.BR ] , -\fIcharacter classes\fP can be specified using the syntax -\fB[:\fP\fIclass\fP\fB:]\fP, where \fIclass\fP is one of the -following classes defined in the POSIX standard: -.PP -.RS -.B -.if n alnum alpha ascii blank cntrl digit graph lower print punct space upper word xdigit -.if t alnum alpha ascii blank cntrl digit graph lower print punct space upper word xdigit -.br -A character class matches any character belonging to that class. -The \fBword\fP character class matches letters, digits, and the character _. -.br -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Within -.B [ -and -.BR ] , -an \fIequivalence class\fP can be specified using the syntax -\fB[=\fP\fIc\fP\fB=]\fP, which matches all characters with the -same collation weight (as defined by the current locale) as -the character \fIc\fP. -.br -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Within -.B [ -and -.BR ] , -the syntax \fB[.\fP\fIsymbol\fP\fB.]\fP matches the collating symbol -\fIsymbol\fP. -.RE -.RE -.PD -.PP -If the \fBextglob\fP shell option is enabled using the \fBshopt\fP -builtin, several extended pattern matching operators are recognized. -In the following description, a \fIpattern-list\fP is a list of one -or more patterns separated by a \fB|\fP. -Composite patterns may be formed using one or more of the following -sub-patterns: -.sp 1 -.PD 0 -.RS -.TP -\fB?(\fP\^\fIpattern-list\^\fP\fB)\fP -Matches zero or one occurrence of the given patterns -.TP -\fB*(\fP\^\fIpattern-list\^\fP\fB)\fP -Matches zero or more occurrences of the given patterns -.TP -\fB+(\fP\^\fIpattern-list\^\fP\fB)\fP -Matches one or more occurrences of the given patterns -.TP -\fB@(\fP\^\fIpattern-list\^\fP\fB)\fP -Matches one of the given patterns -.TP -\fB!(\fP\^\fIpattern-list\^\fP\fB)\fP -Matches anything except one of the given patterns -.RE -.PD -.SS Quote Removal -.PP -After the preceding expansions, all unquoted occurrences of the -characters -.BR \e , -.BR \(aq , -and \^\f3"\fP\^ that did not result from one of the above -expansions are removed. -.SH REDIRECTION -Before a command is executed, its input and output -may be -.I redirected -using a special notation interpreted by the shell. -Redirection allows commands' file handles to be -duplicated, opened, closed, -made to refer to different files, -and can change the files the command reads from and writes to. -Redirection may also be used to modify file handles in the -current shell execution environment. -The following redirection -operators may precede or appear anywhere within a -.I simple command -or may follow a -.IR command . -Redirections are processed in the order they appear, from -left to right. -.PP -Each redirection that may be preceded by a file descriptor number -may instead be preceded by a word of the form {\fIvarname\fP}. -In this case, for each redirection operator except ->&- and <&-, the shell will allocate a file descriptor greater -than or equal to 10 and assign it to \fIvarname\fP. -If >&- or <&- is preceded -by {\fIvarname\fP}, the value of \fIvarname\fP defines the file -descriptor to close. -.PP -In the following descriptions, if the file descriptor number is -omitted, and the first character of the redirection operator is -.BR < , -the redirection refers to the standard input (file descriptor -0). If the first character of the redirection operator is -.BR > , -the redirection refers to the standard output (file descriptor -1). -.PP -The word following the redirection operator in the following -descriptions, unless otherwise noted, is subjected to -brace expansion, tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, arithmetic expansion, quote removal, -pathname expansion, and word splitting. -If it expands to more than one word, -.B bash -reports an error. -.PP -Note that the order of redirections is significant. For example, -the command -.RS -.PP -ls \fB>\fP dirlist 2\fB>&\fP1 -.RE -.PP -directs both standard output and standard error to the file -.IR dirlist , -while the command -.RS -.PP -ls 2\fB>&\fP1 \fB>\fP dirlist -.RE -.PP -directs only the standard output to file -.IR dirlist , -because the standard error was duplicated from the standard output -before the standard output was redirected to -.IR dirlist . -.PP -\fBBash\fP handles several filenames specially when they are used in -redirections, as described in the following table: -.RS -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B /dev/fd/\fIfd\fP -If \fIfd\fP is a valid integer, file descriptor \fIfd\fP is duplicated. -.TP -.B /dev/stdin -File descriptor 0 is duplicated. -.TP -.B /dev/stdout -File descriptor 1 is duplicated. -.TP -.B /dev/stderr -File descriptor 2 is duplicated. -.TP -.B /dev/tcp/\fIhost\fP/\fIport\fP -If \fIhost\fP is a valid hostname or Internet address, and \fIport\fP -is an integer port number or service name, \fBbash\fP attempts to open -the corresponding TCP socket. -.TP -.B /dev/udp/\fIhost\fP/\fIport\fP -If \fIhost\fP is a valid hostname or Internet address, and \fIport\fP -is an integer port number or service name, \fBbash\fP attempts to open -the corresponding UDP socket. -.PD -.RE -.PP -A failure to open or create a file causes the redirection to fail. -.PP -Redirections using file descriptors greater than 9 should be used with -care, as they may conflict with file descriptors the shell uses -internally. -.SS Redirecting Input -.PP -Redirection of input causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of -.I word -to be opened for reading on file descriptor -.IR n , -or the standard input (file descriptor 0) if -.I n -is not specified. -.PP -The general format for redirecting input is: -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB<\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.SS Redirecting Output -.PP -Redirection of output causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of -.I word -to be opened for writing on file descriptor -.IR n , -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if -.I n -is not specified. If the file does not exist it is created; -if it does exist it is truncated to zero size. -.PP -The general format for redirecting output is: -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB>\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -If the redirection operator is -.BR > , -and the -.B noclobber -option to the -.B set -builtin has been enabled, the redirection will fail if the file -whose name results from the expansion of \fIword\fP exists and is -a regular file. -If the redirection operator is -.BR >| , -or the redirection operator is -.B > -and the -.B noclobber -option to the -.B set -builtin command is not enabled, the redirection is attempted even -if the file named by \fIword\fP exists. -.SS Appending Redirected Output -.PP -Redirection of output in this fashion -causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of -.I word -to be opened for appending on file descriptor -.IR n , -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if -.I n -is not specified. If the file does not exist it is created. -.PP -The general format for appending output is: -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB>>\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -.SS Redirecting Standard Output and Standard Error -.PP -This construct allows both the -standard output (file descriptor 1) and -the standard error output (file descriptor 2) -to be redirected to the file whose name is the -expansion of -.IR word . -.PP -There are two formats for redirecting standard output and -standard error: -.RS -.PP -\fB&>\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -and -.RS -\fB>&\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -Of the two forms, the first is preferred. -This is semantically equivalent to -.RS -.PP -\fB>\fP\fIword\fP 2\fB>&\fP1 -.RE -.PP -When using the second form, \fIword\fP may not expand to a number or -\fB\-\fP. If it does, other redirection operators apply -(see \fBDuplicating File Descriptors\fP below) for compatibility -reasons. -.SS Appending Standard Output and Standard Error -.PP -This construct allows both the -standard output (file descriptor 1) and -the standard error output (file descriptor 2) -to be appended to the file whose name is the -expansion of -.IR word . -.PP -The format for appending standard output and standard error is: -.RS -.PP -\fB&>>\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -This is semantically equivalent to -.RS -.PP -\fB>>\fP\fIword\fP 2\fB>&\fP1 -.RE -.PP -(see \fBDuplicating File Descriptors\fP below). -.SS Here Documents -.PP -This type of redirection instructs the shell to read input from the -current source until a line containing only -.I delimiter -(with no trailing blanks) -is seen. All of -the lines read up to that point are then used as the standard -input for a command. -.PP -The format of here-documents is: -.RS -.PP -.nf -\fB<<\fP[\fB\-\fP]\fIword\fP - \fIhere-document\fP -\fIdelimiter\fP -.fi -.RE -.PP -No parameter and variable expansion, command substitution, -arithmetic expansion, or pathname expansion is performed on -.IR word . -If any characters in -.I word -are quoted, the -.I delimiter -is the result of quote removal on -.IR word , -and the lines in the here-document are not expanded. -If \fIword\fP is unquoted, -all lines of the here-document are subjected to -parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion, -the character sequence -.B \e -is ignored, and -.B \e -must be used to quote the characters -.BR \e , -.BR $ , -and -.BR \` . -.PP -If the redirection operator is -.BR <<\- , -then all leading tab characters are stripped from input lines and the -line containing -.IR delimiter . -This allows -here-documents within shell scripts to be indented in a -natural fashion. -.SS "Here Strings" -A variant of here documents, the format is: -.RS -.PP -.nf -\fB<<<\fP\fIword\fP -.fi -.RE -.PP -The \fIword\fP undergoes -brace expansion, tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal. -Pathname expansion and word splitting are not performed. -The result is supplied as a single string to the command on its -standard input. -.SS "Duplicating File Descriptors" -.PP -The redirection operator -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB<&\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -is used to duplicate input file descriptors. -If -.I word -expands to one or more digits, the file descriptor denoted by -.I n -is made to be a copy of that file descriptor. -If the digits in -.I word -do not specify a file descriptor open for input, a redirection error occurs. -If -.I word -evaluates to -.BR \- , -file descriptor -.I n -is closed. If -.I n -is not specified, the standard input (file descriptor 0) is used. -.PP -The operator -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB>&\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -is used similarly to duplicate output file descriptors. If -.I n -is not specified, the standard output (file descriptor 1) is used. -If the digits in -.I word -do not specify a file descriptor open for output, a redirection error occurs. -If -.I word -evaluates to -.BR \- , -file descriptor -.I n -is closed. -As a special case, if \fIn\fP is omitted, and \fIword\fP does not -expand to one or more digits or \fB\-\fP, the standard output and standard -error are redirected as described previously. -.SS "Moving File Descriptors" -.PP -The redirection operator -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB<&\fP\fIdigit\fP\fB\-\fP -.RE -.PP -moves the file descriptor \fIdigit\fP to file descriptor -.IR n , -or the standard input (file descriptor 0) if \fIn\fP is not specified. -\fIdigit\fP is closed after being duplicated to \fIn\fP. -.PP -Similarly, the redirection operator -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB>&\fP\fIdigit\fP\fB\-\fP -.RE -.PP -moves the file descriptor \fIdigit\fP to file descriptor -.IR n , -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if \fIn\fP is not specified. -.SS "Opening File Descriptors for Reading and Writing" -.PP -The redirection operator -.RS -.PP -[\fIn\fP]\fB<>\fP\fIword\fP -.RE -.PP -causes the file whose name is the expansion of -.I word -to be opened for both reading and writing on file descriptor -.IR n , -or on file descriptor 0 if -.I n -is not specified. If the file does not exist, it is created. -.SH ALIASES -\fIAliases\fP allow a string to be substituted for a word when it is used -as the first word of a simple command. -The shell maintains a list of aliases that may be set and unset with the -.B alias -and -.B unalias -builtin commands (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -The first word of each simple command, if unquoted, -is checked to see if it has an -alias. If so, that word is replaced by the text of the alias. -The characters \fB/\fP, \fB$\fP, \fB\`\fP, and \fB=\fP and -any of the shell \fImetacharacters\fP or quoting characters -listed above may not appear in an alias name. -The replacement text may contain any valid shell input, -including shell metacharacters. -The first word of the replacement text is tested -for aliases, but a word that is identical to an alias being expanded -is not expanded a second time. -This means that one may alias -.B ls -to -.BR "ls \-F" , -for instance, and -.B bash -does not try to recursively expand the replacement text. -If the last character of the alias value is a -.IR blank , -then the next command -word following the alias is also checked for alias expansion. -.PP -Aliases are created and listed with the -.B alias -command, and removed with the -.B unalias -command. -.PP -There is no mechanism for using arguments in the replacement text. -If arguments are needed, a shell function should be used (see -.SM -.B FUNCTIONS -below). -.PP -Aliases are not expanded when the shell is not interactive, unless -the -.B expand_aliases -shell option is set using -.B shopt -(see the description of -.B shopt -under -.SM -\fBSHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS\fP -below). -.PP -The rules concerning the definition and use of aliases are -somewhat confusing. -.B Bash -always reads at least one complete line -of input before executing any -of the commands on that line. Aliases are expanded when a -command is read, not when it is executed. Therefore, an -alias definition appearing on the same line as another -command does not take effect until the next line of input is read. -The commands following the alias definition -on that line are not affected by the new alias. -This behavior is also an issue when functions are executed. -Aliases are expanded when a function definition is read, -not when the function is executed, because a function definition -is itself a compound command. As a consequence, aliases -defined in a function are not available until after that -function is executed. To be safe, always put -alias definitions on a separate line, and do not use -.B alias -in compound commands. -.PP -For almost every purpose, aliases are superseded by -shell functions. -.SH FUNCTIONS -A shell function, defined as described above under -.SM -.BR "SHELL GRAMMAR" , -stores a series of commands for later execution. -When the name of a shell function is used as a simple command name, -the list of commands associated with that function name is executed. -Functions are executed in the context of the -current shell; no new process is created to interpret -them (contrast this with the execution of a shell script). -When a function is executed, the arguments to the -function become the positional parameters -during its execution. -The special parameter -.B # -is updated to reflect the change. Special parameter \fB0\fP -is unchanged. -The first element of the -.SM -.B FUNCNAME -variable is set to the name of the function while the function -is executing. -.PP -All other aspects of the shell execution -environment are identical between a function and its caller -with these exceptions: the -.SM -.B DEBUG -and -.B RETURN -traps (see the description of the -.B trap -builtin under -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below) are not inherited unless the function has been given the -\fBtrace\fP attribute (see the description of the -.SM -.B declare -builtin below) or the -\fB\-o functrace\fP shell option has been enabled with -the \fBset\fP builtin -(in which case all functions inherit the \fBDEBUG\fP and \fBRETURN\fP traps), -and the -.SM -.B ERR -trap is not inherited unless the \fB\-o errtrace\fP shell option has -been enabled. -.PP -Variables local to the function may be declared with the -.B local -builtin command. Ordinarily, variables and their values -are shared between the function and its caller. -.PP -The \fBFUNCNEST\fP variable, if set to a numeric value greater -than 0, defines a maximum function nesting level. Function -invocations that exceed the limit cause the entire command to -abort. -.PP -If the builtin command -.B return -is executed in a function, the function completes and -execution resumes with the next command after the function -call. -Any command associated with the \fBRETURN\fP trap is executed -before execution resumes. -When a function completes, the values of the -positional parameters and the special parameter -.B # -are restored to the values they had prior to the function's -execution. -.PP -Function names and definitions may be listed with the -.B \-f -option to the -.B declare -or -.B typeset -builtin commands. The -.B \-F -option to -.B declare -or -.B typeset -will list the function names only -(and optionally the source file and line number, if the \fBextdebug\fP -shell option is enabled). -Functions may be exported so that subshells -automatically have them defined with the -.B \-f -option to the -.B export -builtin. -A function definition may be deleted using the \fB\-f\fP option to -the -.B unset -builtin. -Note that shell functions and variables with the same name may result -in multiple identically-named entries in the environment passed to the -shell's children. -Care should be taken in cases where this may cause a problem. -.PP -Functions may be recursive. -The \fBFUNCNEST\fP variable may be used to limit the depth of the -function call stack and restrict the number of function invocations. -By default, no limit is imposed on the number of recursive calls. -.SH "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" -The shell allows arithmetic expressions to be evaluated, under -certain circumstances (see the \fBlet\fP and \fBdeclare\fP builtin -commands and \fBArithmetic Expansion\fP). -Evaluation is done in fixed-width integers with no check for overflow, -though division by 0 is trapped and flagged as an error. -The operators and their precedence, associativity, and values -are the same as in the C language. -The following list of operators is grouped into levels of -equal-precedence operators. -The levels are listed in order of decreasing precedence. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \fIid\fP++ \fIid\fP\-\- -variable post-increment and post-decrement -.TP -.B ++\fIid\fP \-\-\fIid\fP -variable pre-increment and pre-decrement -.TP -.B \- + -unary minus and plus -.TP -.B ! ~ -logical and bitwise negation -.TP -.B ** -exponentiation -.TP -.B * / % -multiplication, division, remainder -.TP -.B + \- -addition, subtraction -.TP -.B << >> -left and right bitwise shifts -.TP -.B <= >= < > -comparison -.TP -.B == != -equality and inequality -.TP -.B & -bitwise AND -.TP -.B ^ -bitwise exclusive OR -.TP -.B | -bitwise OR -.TP -.B && -logical AND -.TP -.B || -logical OR -.TP -.B \fIexpr\fP?\fIexpr\fP:\fIexpr\fP -conditional operator -.TP -.B = *= /= %= += \-= <<= >>= &= ^= |= -assignment -.TP -.B \fIexpr1\fP , \fIexpr2\fP -comma -.PD -.PP -Shell variables are allowed as operands; parameter expansion is -performed before the expression is evaluated. -Within an expression, shell variables may also be referenced by name -without using the parameter expansion syntax. -A shell variable that is null or unset evaluates to 0 when referenced -by name without using the parameter expansion syntax. -The value of a variable is evaluated as an arithmetic expression -when it is referenced, or when a variable which has been given the -\fIinteger\fP attribute using \fBdeclare -i\fP is assigned a value. -A null value evaluates to 0. -A shell variable need not have its \fIinteger\fP attribute -turned on to be used in an expression. -.PP -Constants with a leading 0 are interpreted as octal numbers. -A leading 0x or 0X denotes hexadecimal. -Otherwise, numbers take the form [\fIbase#\fP]n, where the optional \fIbase\fP -is a decimal number between 2 and 64 representing the arithmetic -base, and \fIn\fP is a number in that base. -If \fIbase#\fP is omitted, then base 10 is used. -When specifying \fIn\fP, -the digits greater< than 9 are represented by the lowercase letters, -the uppercase letters, @, and _, in that order. -If \fIbase\fP is less than or equal to 36, lowercase and uppercase -letters may be used interchangeably to represent numbers between 10 -and 35. -.PP -Operators are evaluated in order of precedence. Sub-expressions in -parentheses are evaluated first and may override the precedence -rules above. -.SH "CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS" -Conditional expressions are used by the \fB[[\fP compound command and -the \fBtest\fP and \fB[\fP builtin commands to test file attributes -and perform string and arithmetic comparisons. -Expressions are formed from the following unary or binary primaries. -If any \fIfile\fP argument to one of the primaries is of the form -\fI/dev/fd/n\fP, then file descriptor \fIn\fP is checked. -If the \fIfile\fP argument to one of the primaries is one of -\fI/dev/stdin\fP, \fI/dev/stdout\fP, or \fI/dev/stderr\fP, file -descriptor 0, 1, or 2, respectively, is checked. -.PP -Unless otherwise specified, primaries that operate on files follow symbolic -links and operate on the target of the link, rather than the link itself. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -When used with \fB[[\fP, the \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators sort -lexicographically using the current locale. -The \fBtest\fP command sorts using ASCII ordering. -.sp 1 -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-a \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists. -.TP -.B \-b \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a block special file. -.TP -.B \-c \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a character special file. -.TP -.B \-d \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a directory. -.TP -.B \-e \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists. -.TP -.B \-f \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a regular file. -.TP -.B \-g \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is set-group-id. -.TP -.B \-h \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a symbolic link. -.TP -.B \-k \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and its ``sticky'' bit is set. -.TP -.B \-p \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a named pipe (FIFO). -.TP -.B \-r \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is readable. -.TP -.B \-s \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and has a size greater than zero. -.TP -.B \-t \fIfd\fP -True if file descriptor -.I fd -is open and refers to a terminal. -.TP -.B \-u \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and its set-user-id bit is set. -.TP -.B \-w \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is writable. -.TP -.B \-x \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is executable. -.TP -.B \-G \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is owned by the effective group id. -.TP -.B \-L \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a symbolic link. -.TP -.B \-N \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and has been modified since it was last read. -.TP -.B \-O \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is owned by the effective user id. -.TP -.B \-S \fIfile\fP -True if \fIfile\fP exists and is a socket. -.TP -\fIfile1\fP \fB\-ef\fP \fIfile2\fP -True if \fIfile1\fP and \fIfile2\fP refer to the same device and -inode numbers. -.TP -\fIfile1\fP \-\fBnt\fP \fIfile2\fP -True if \fIfile1\fP is newer (according to modification date) than \fIfile2\fP, -or if \fIfile1\fP exists and \fPfile2\fP does not. -.TP -\fIfile1\fP \-\fBot\fP \fIfile2\fP -True if \fIfile1\fP is older than \fIfile2\fP, or if \fIfile2\fP exists -and \fIfile1\fP does not. -.TP -.B \-o \fIoptname\fP -True if the shell option -.I optname -is enabled. -See the list of options under the description of the -.B \-o -option to the -.B set -builtin below. -.TP -.B \-v \fIvarname\fP -True if the shell variable -.I varname -is set (has been assigned a value). -.TP -.B \-R \fIvarname\fP -True if the shell variable -.I varname -is set and is a name reference. -.TP -.B \-z \fIstring\fP -True if the length of \fIstring\fP is zero. -.TP -\fIstring\fP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-n \fIstring\fP -.PD -True if the length of -.I string -is non-zero. -.TP -\fIstring1\fP \fB==\fP \fIstring2\fP -.PD 0 -.TP -\fIstring1\fP \fB=\fP \fIstring2\fP -.PD -True if the strings are equal. \fB=\fP should be used -with the \fBtest\fP command for POSIX conformance. -When used with the \fB[[\fP command, this performs pattern matching as -described above (\fBCompound Commands\fP). -.TP -\fIstring1\fP \fB!=\fP \fIstring2\fP -True if the strings are not equal. -.TP -\fIstring1\fP \fB<\fP \fIstring2\fP -True if \fIstring1\fP sorts before \fIstring2\fP lexicographically. -.TP -\fIstring1\fP \fB>\fP \fIstring2\fP -True if \fIstring1\fP sorts after \fIstring2\fP lexicographically. -.TP -.I \fIarg1\fP \fBOP\fP \fIarg2\fP -.SM -.B OP -is one of -.BR \-eq , -.BR \-ne , -.BR \-lt , -.BR \-le , -.BR \-gt , -or -.BR \-ge . -These arithmetic binary operators return true if \fIarg1\fP -is equal to, not equal to, less than, less than or equal to, -greater than, or greater than or equal to \fIarg2\fP, respectively. -.I Arg1 -and -.I arg2 -may be positive or negative integers. -.PD -.SH "SIMPLE COMMAND EXPANSION" -When a simple command is executed, the shell performs the following -expansions, assignments, and redirections, from left to right. -.IP 1. -The words that the parser has marked as variable assignments (those -preceding the command name) and redirections are saved for later -processing. -.IP 2. -The words that are not variable assignments or redirections are -expanded. If any words remain after expansion, the first word -is taken to be the name of the command and the remaining words are -the arguments. -.IP 3. -Redirections are performed as described above under -.SM -.BR REDIRECTION . -.IP 4. -The text after the \fB=\fP in each variable assignment undergoes tilde -expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic expansion, -and quote removal before being assigned to the variable. -.PP -If no command name results, the variable assignments affect the current -shell environment. Otherwise, the variables are added to the environment -of the executed command and do not affect the current shell environment. -If any of the assignments attempts to assign a value to a readonly variable, -an error occurs, and the command exits with a non-zero status. -.PP -If no command name results, redirections are performed, but do not -affect the current shell environment. A redirection error causes the -command to exit with a non-zero status. -.PP -If there is a command name left after expansion, execution proceeds as -described below. Otherwise, the command exits. If one of the expansions -contained a command substitution, the exit status of the command is -the exit status of the last command substitution performed. If there -were no command substitutions, the command exits with a status of zero. -.SH "COMMAND EXECUTION" -After a command has been split into words, if it results in a -simple command and an optional list of arguments, the following -actions are taken. -.PP -If the command name contains no slashes, the shell attempts to -locate it. If there exists a shell function by that name, that -function is invoked as described above in -.SM -.BR FUNCTIONS . -If the name does not match a function, the shell searches for -it in the list of shell builtins. If a match is found, that -builtin is invoked. -.PP -If the name is neither a shell function nor a builtin, -and contains no slashes, -.B bash -searches each element of the -.SM -.B PATH -for a directory containing an executable file by that name. -.B Bash -uses a hash table to remember the full pathnames of executable -files (see -.B hash -under -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). -A full search of the directories in -.SM -.B PATH -is performed only if the command is not found in the hash table. -If the search is unsuccessful, the shell searches for a defined shell -function named \fBcommand_not_found_handle\fP. -If that function exists, it is invoked with the original command and -the original command's arguments as its arguments, and the function's -exit status becomes the exit status of the shell. -If that function is not defined, the shell prints an error -message and returns an exit status of 127. -.PP -If the search is successful, or if the command name contains -one or more slashes, the shell executes the named program in a -separate execution environment. -Argument 0 is set to the name given, and the remaining arguments -to the command are set to the arguments given, if any. -.PP -If this execution fails because the file is not in executable -format, and the file is not a directory, it is assumed to be -a \fIshell script\fP, a file -containing shell commands. A subshell is spawned to execute -it. This subshell reinitializes itself, so -that the effect is as if a new shell had been invoked -to handle the script, with the exception that the locations of -commands remembered by the parent (see -.B hash -below under -.SM -\fBSHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS\fP) -are retained by the child. -.PP -If the program is a file beginning with -.BR #! , -the remainder of the first line specifies an interpreter -for the program. The shell executes the -specified interpreter on operating systems that do not -handle this executable format themselves. The arguments to the -interpreter consist of a single optional argument following the -interpreter name on the first line of the program, followed -by the name of the program, followed by the command -arguments, if any. -.SH COMMAND EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT -The shell has an \fIexecution environment\fP, which consists of the -following: -.IP \(bu -open files inherited by the shell at invocation, as modified by -redirections supplied to the \fBexec\fP builtin -.IP \(bu -the current working directory as set by \fBcd\fP, \fBpushd\fP, or -\fBpopd\fP, or inherited by the shell at invocation -.IP \(bu -the file creation mode mask as set by \fBumask\fP or inherited from -the shell's parent -.IP \(bu -current traps set by \fBtrap\fP -.IP \(bu -shell parameters that are set by variable assignment or with \fBset\fP -or inherited from the shell's parent in the environment -.IP \(bu -shell functions defined during execution or inherited from the shell's -parent in the environment -.IP \(bu -options enabled at invocation (either by default or with command-line -arguments) or by \fBset\fP -.IP \(bu -options enabled by \fBshopt\fP -.IP \(bu -shell aliases defined with \fBalias\fP -.IP \(bu -various process IDs, including those of background jobs, the value -of \fB$$\fP, and the value of -.SM -.B PPID -.PP -When a simple command other than a builtin or shell function -is to be executed, it -is invoked in a separate execution environment that consists of -the following. Unless otherwise noted, the values are inherited -from the shell. -.if n .sp 1 -.IP \(bu -the shell's open files, plus any modifications and additions specified -by redirections to the command -.IP \(bu -the current working directory -.IP \(bu -the file creation mode mask -.IP \(bu -shell variables and functions marked for export, along with variables -exported for the command, passed in the environment -.IP \(bu -traps caught by the shell are reset to the values inherited from the -shell's parent, and traps ignored by the shell are ignored -.PP -A command invoked in this separate environment cannot affect the -shell's execution environment. -.PP -Command substitution, commands grouped with parentheses, -and asynchronous commands are invoked in a -subshell environment that is a duplicate of the shell environment, -except that traps caught by the shell are reset to the values -that the shell inherited from its parent at invocation. Builtin -commands that are invoked as part of a pipeline are also executed in a -subshell environment. Changes made to the subshell environment -cannot affect the shell's execution environment. -.PP -Subshells spawned to execute command substitutions inherit the value of -the \fB\-e\fP option from the parent shell. When not in \fIposix\fP mode, -\fBbash\fP clears the \fB\-e\fP option in such subshells. -.PP -If a command is followed by a \fB&\fP and job control is not active, the -default standard input for the command is the empty file \fI/dev/null\fP. -Otherwise, the invoked command inherits the file descriptors of the calling -shell as modified by redirections. -.SH ENVIRONMENT -When a program is invoked it is given an array of strings -called the -.IR environment . -This is a list of -\fIname\fP\-\fIvalue\fP pairs, of the form -.IR "name\fR=\fPvalue" . -.PP -The shell provides several ways to manipulate the environment. -On invocation, the shell scans its own environment and -creates a parameter for each name found, automatically marking -it for -.I export -to child processes. Executed commands inherit the environment. -The -.B export -and -.B declare \-x -commands allow parameters and functions to be added to and -deleted from the environment. If the value of a parameter -in the environment is modified, the new value becomes part -of the environment, replacing the old. The environment -inherited by any executed command consists of the shell's -initial environment, whose values may be modified in the shell, -less any pairs removed by the -.B unset -command, plus any additions via the -.B export -and -.B declare \-x -commands. -.PP -The environment for any -.I simple command -or function may be augmented temporarily by prefixing it with -parameter assignments, as described above in -.SM -.BR PARAMETERS . -These assignment statements affect only the environment seen -by that command. -.PP -If the -.B \-k -option is set (see the -.B set -builtin command below), then -.I all -parameter assignments are placed in the environment for a command, -not just those that precede the command name. -.PP -When -.B bash -invokes an external command, the variable -.B _ -is set to the full filename of the command and passed to that -command in its environment. -.SH "EXIT STATUS" -.PP -The exit status of an executed command is the value returned by the -\fIwaitpid\fP system call or equivalent function. Exit statuses -fall between 0 and 255, though, as explained below, the shell may -use values above 125 specially. Exit statuses from shell builtins and -compound commands are also limited to this range. Under certain -circumstances, the shell will use special values to indicate specific -failure modes. -.PP -For the shell's purposes, a command which exits with a -zero exit status has succeeded. An exit status of zero -indicates success. A non-zero exit status indicates failure. -When a command terminates on a fatal signal \fIN\fP, \fBbash\fP uses -the value of 128+\fIN\fP as the exit status. -.PP -If a command is not found, the child process created to -execute it returns a status of 127. If a command is found -but is not executable, the return status is 126. -.PP -If a command fails because of an error during expansion or redirection, -the exit status is greater than zero. -.PP -Shell builtin commands return a status of 0 (\fItrue\fP) if -successful, and non-zero (\fIfalse\fP) if an error occurs -while they execute. -All builtins return an exit status of 2 to indicate incorrect usage. -.PP -\fBBash\fP itself returns the exit status of the last command -executed, unless a syntax error occurs, in which case it exits -with a non-zero value. See also the \fBexit\fP builtin -command below. -.SH SIGNALS -When \fBbash\fP is interactive, in the absence of any traps, it ignores -.SM -.B SIGTERM -(so that \fBkill 0\fP does not kill an interactive shell), -and -.SM -.B SIGINT -is caught and handled (so that the \fBwait\fP builtin is interruptible). -In all cases, \fBbash\fP ignores -.SM -.BR SIGQUIT . -If job control is in effect, -.B bash -ignores -.SM -.BR SIGTTIN , -.SM -.BR SIGTTOU , -and -.SM -.BR SIGTSTP . -.PP -Non-builtin commands run by \fBbash\fP have signal handlers -set to the values inherited by the shell from its parent. -When job control is not in effect, asynchronous commands -ignore -.SM -.B SIGINT -and -.SM -.B SIGQUIT -in addition to these inherited handlers. -Commands run as a result of command substitution ignore the -keyboard-generated job control signals -.SM -.BR SIGTTIN , -.SM -.BR SIGTTOU , -and -.SM -.BR SIGTSTP . -.PP -The shell exits by default upon receipt of a -.SM -.BR SIGHUP . -Before exiting, an interactive shell resends the -.SM -.B SIGHUP -to all jobs, running or stopped. -Stopped jobs are sent -.SM -.B SIGCONT -to ensure that they receive the -.SM -.BR SIGHUP . -To prevent the shell from -sending the signal to a particular job, it should be removed from the -jobs table with the -.B disown -builtin (see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below) or marked -to not receive -.SM -.B SIGHUP -using -.BR "disown \-h" . -.PP -If the -.B huponexit -shell option has been set with -.BR shopt , -.B bash -sends a -.SM -.B SIGHUP -to all jobs when an interactive login shell exits. -.PP -If \fBbash\fP is waiting for a command to complete and receives a signal -for which a trap has been set, the trap will not be executed until -the command completes. -When \fBbash\fP is waiting for an asynchronous command via the \fBwait\fP -builtin, the reception of a signal for which a trap has been set will -cause the \fBwait\fP builtin to return immediately with an exit status -greater than 128, immediately after which the trap is executed. -.SH "JOB CONTROL" -.I Job control -refers to the ability to selectively stop (\fIsuspend\fP) -the execution of processes and continue (\fIresume\fP) -their execution at a later point. A user typically employs -this facility via an interactive interface supplied jointly -by the operating system kernel's terminal driver and -.BR bash . -.PP -The shell associates a -.I job -with each pipeline. It keeps a table of currently executing -jobs, which may be listed with the -.B jobs -command. When -.B bash -starts a job asynchronously (in the -.IR background ), -it prints a line that looks like: -.RS -.PP -[1] 25647 -.RE -.PP -indicating that this job is job number 1 and that the process ID -of the last process in the pipeline associated with this job is 25647. -All of the processes in a single pipeline are members of the same job. -.B Bash -uses the -.I job -abstraction as the basis for job control. -.PP -To facilitate the implementation of the user interface to job -control, the operating system maintains the notion of a \fIcurrent terminal -process group ID\fP. Members of this process group (processes whose -process group ID is equal to the current terminal process group ID) -receive keyboard-generated signals such as -.SM -.BR SIGINT . -These processes are said to be in the -.IR foreground . -.I Background -processes are those whose process group ID differs from the terminal's; -such processes are immune to keyboard-generated signals. -Only foreground processes are allowed to read from or, if the -user so specifies with \f(CWstty tostop\fP, write to the -terminal. -Background processes which attempt to read from (write to when -\f(CWstty tostop\fP is in effect) the -terminal are sent a -.SM -.B SIGTTIN (SIGTTOU) -signal by the kernel's terminal driver, -which, unless caught, suspends the process. -.PP -If the operating system on which -.B bash -is running supports -job control, -.B bash -contains facilities to use it. -Typing the -.I suspend -character (typically -.BR ^Z , -Control-Z) while a process is running -causes that process to be stopped and returns control to -.BR bash . -Typing the -.I "delayed suspend" -character (typically -.BR ^Y , -Control-Y) causes the process to be stopped when it -attempts to read input from the terminal, and control to -be returned to -.BR bash . -The user may then manipulate the state of this job, using the -.B bg -command to continue it in the background, the -.B fg -command to continue it in the foreground, or -the -.B kill -command to kill it. A \fB^Z\fP takes effect immediately, -and has the additional side effect of causing pending output -and typeahead to be discarded. -.PP -There are a number of ways to refer to a job in the shell. -The character -.B % -introduces a job specification (\fIjobspec\fP). Job number -.I n -may be referred to as -.BR %n . -A job may also be referred to using a prefix of the name used to -start it, or using a substring that appears in its command line. -For example, -.B %ce -refers to a stopped -.B ce -job. If a prefix matches more than one job, -.B bash -reports an error. Using -.BR %?ce , -on the other hand, refers to any job containing the string -.B ce -in its command line. If the substring matches more than one job, -.B bash -reports an error. The symbols -.B %% -and -.B %+ -refer to the shell's notion of the -.IR "current job" , -which is the last job stopped while it was in -the foreground or started in the background. -The -.I "previous job" -may be referenced using -.BR %\- . -If there is only a single job, \fB%+\fP and \fB%\-\fP can both be used -to refer to that job. -In output pertaining to jobs (e.g., the output of the -.B jobs -command), the current job is always flagged with a -.BR + , -and the previous job with a -.BR \- . -A single % (with no accompanying job specification) also refers to the -current job. -.PP -Simply naming a job can be used to bring it into the -foreground: -.B %1 -is a synonym for -\fB``fg %1''\fP, -bringing job 1 from the background into the foreground. -Similarly, -.B ``%1 &'' -resumes job 1 in the background, equivalent to -\fB``bg %1''\fP. -.PP -The shell learns immediately whenever a job changes state. -Normally, -.B bash -waits until it is about to print a prompt before reporting -changes in a job's status so as to not interrupt -any other output. If the -.B \-b -option to the -.B set -builtin command -is enabled, -.B bash -reports such changes immediately. -Any trap on -.SM -.B SIGCHLD -is executed for each child that exits. -.PP -If an attempt to exit -.B bash -is made while jobs are stopped (or, if the \fBcheckjobs\fP shell option has -been enabled using the \fBshopt\fP builtin, running), the shell prints a -warning message, and, if the \fBcheckjobs\fP option is enabled, lists the -jobs and their statuses. -The -.B jobs -command may then be used to inspect their status. -If a second attempt to exit is made without an intervening command, -the shell does not print another warning, and any stopped -jobs are terminated. -.SH PROMPTING -When executing interactively, -.B bash -displays the primary prompt -.SM -.B PS1 -when it is ready to read a command, and the secondary prompt -.SM -.B PS2 -when it needs more input to complete a command. -.B Bash -allows these prompt strings to be customized by inserting a number of -backslash-escaped special characters that are decoded as follows: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \ea -an ASCII bell character (07) -.TP -.B \ed -the date in "Weekday Month Date" format (e.g., "Tue May 26") -.TP -.B \eD{\fIformat\fP} -the \fIformat\fP is passed to \fIstrftime\fP(3) and the result is inserted -into the prompt string; an empty \fIformat\fP results in a locale-specific -time representation. The braces are required -.TP -.B \ee -an ASCII escape character (033) -.TP -.B \eh -the hostname up to the first `.' -.TP -.B \eH -the hostname -.TP -.B \ej -the number of jobs currently managed by the shell -.TP -.B \el -the basename of the shell's terminal device name -.TP -.B \en -newline -.TP -.B \er -carriage return -.TP -.B \es -the name of the shell, the basename of -.B $0 -(the portion following the final slash) -.TP -.B \et -the current time in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format -.TP -.B \eT -the current time in 12-hour HH:MM:SS format -.TP -.B \e@ -the current time in 12-hour am/pm format -.TP -.B \eA -the current time in 24-hour HH:MM format -.TP -.B \eu -the username of the current user -.TP -.B \ev -the version of \fBbash\fP (e.g., 2.00) -.TP -.B \eV -the release of \fBbash\fP, version + patch level (e.g., 2.00.0) -.TP -.B \ew -the current working directory, with -.SM -.B $HOME -abbreviated with a tilde -(uses the value of the -.SM -.B PROMPT_DIRTRIM -variable) -.TP -.B \eW -the basename of the current working directory, with -.SM -.B $HOME -abbreviated with a tilde -.TP -.B \e! -the history number of this command -.TP -.B \e# -the command number of this command -.TP -.B \e$ -if the effective UID is 0, a -.BR # , -otherwise a -.B $ -.TP -.B \e\fInnn\fP -the character corresponding to the octal number \fInnn\fP -.TP -.B \e\e -a backslash -.TP -.B \e[ -begin a sequence of non-printing characters, which could be used to -embed a terminal control sequence into the prompt -.TP -.B \e] -end a sequence of non-printing characters -.PD -.RE -.PP -The command number and the history number are usually different: -the history number of a command is its position in the history -list, which may include commands restored from the history file -(see -.SM -.B HISTORY -below), while the command number is the position in the sequence -of commands executed during the current shell session. -After the string is decoded, it is expanded via -parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic -expansion, and quote removal, subject to the value of the -.B promptvars -shell option (see the description of the -.B shopt -command under -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below). -.SH READLINE -This is the library that handles reading input when using an interactive -shell, unless the -.B \-\-noediting -option is given at shell invocation. -Line editing is also used when using the \fB\-e\fP option to the -\fBread\fP builtin. -By default, the line editing commands are similar to those of Emacs. -A vi-style line editing interface is also available. -Line editing can be enabled at any time using the -.B \-o emacs -or -.B \-o vi -options to the -.B set -builtin (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -To turn off line editing after the shell is running, use the -.B +o emacs -or -.B +o vi -options to the -.B set -builtin. -.SS "Readline Notation" -.PP -In this section, the Emacs-style notation is used to denote -keystrokes. Control keys are denoted by C\-\fIkey\fR, e.g., C\-n -means Control\-N. Similarly, -.I meta -keys are denoted by M\-\fIkey\fR, so M\-x means Meta\-X. (On keyboards -without a -.I meta -key, M\-\fIx\fP means ESC \fIx\fP, i.e., press the Escape key -then the -.I x -key. This makes ESC the \fImeta prefix\fP. -The combination M\-C\-\fIx\fP means ESC\-Control\-\fIx\fP, -or press the Escape key -then hold the Control key while pressing the -.I x -key.) -.PP -Readline commands may be given numeric -.IR arguments , -which normally act as a repeat count. -Sometimes, however, it is the sign of the argument that is significant. -Passing a negative argument to a command that acts in the forward -direction (e.g., \fBkill\-line\fP) causes that command to act in a -backward direction. -Commands whose behavior with arguments deviates from this are noted -below. -.PP -When a command is described as \fIkilling\fP text, the text -deleted is saved for possible future retrieval -(\fIyanking\fP). The killed text is saved in a -\fIkill ring\fP. Consecutive kills cause the text to be -accumulated into one unit, which can be yanked all at once. -Commands which do not kill text separate the chunks of text -on the kill ring. -.SS "Readline Initialization" -.PP -Readline is customized by putting commands in an initialization -file (the \fIinputrc\fP file). -The name of this file is taken from the value of the -.SM -.B INPUTRC -variable. If that variable is unset, the default is -.IR ~/.inputrc . -When a program which uses the readline library starts up, the -initialization file is read, and the key bindings and variables -are set. -There are only a few basic constructs allowed in the -readline initialization file. -Blank lines are ignored. -Lines beginning with a \fB#\fP are comments. -Lines beginning with a \fB$\fP indicate conditional constructs. -Other lines denote key bindings and variable settings. -.PP -The default key-bindings may be changed with an -.I inputrc -file. -Other programs that use this library may add their own commands -and bindings. -.PP -For example, placing -.RS -.PP -M\-Control\-u: universal\-argument -.RE -or -.RS -C\-Meta\-u: universal\-argument -.RE -into the -.I inputrc -would make M\-C\-u execute the readline command -.IR universal\-argument . -.PP -The following symbolic character names are recognized: -.IR RUBOUT , -.IR DEL , -.IR ESC , -.IR LFD , -.IR NEWLINE , -.IR RET , -.IR RETURN , -.IR SPC , -.IR SPACE , -and -.IR TAB . -.PP -In addition to command names, readline allows keys to be bound -to a string that is inserted when the key is pressed (a \fImacro\fP). -.SS "Readline Key Bindings" -.PP -The syntax for controlling key bindings in the -.I inputrc -file is simple. All that is required is the name of the -command or the text of a macro and a key sequence to which -it should be bound. The name may be specified in one of two ways: -as a symbolic key name, possibly with \fIMeta\-\fP or \fIControl\-\fP -prefixes, or as a key sequence. -.PP -When using the form \fBkeyname\fP:\^\fIfunction\-name\fP or \fImacro\fP, -.I keyname -is the name of a key spelled out in English. For example: -.sp -.RS -Control-u: universal\-argument -.br -Meta-Rubout: backward-kill-word -.br -Control-o: "> output" -.RE -.LP -In the above example, -.I C\-u -is bound to the function -.BR universal\-argument , -.I M\-DEL -is bound to the function -.BR backward\-kill\-word , -and -.I C\-o -is bound to run the macro -expressed on the right hand side (that is, to insert the text -.if t \f(CW> output\fP -.if n ``> output'' -into the line). -.PP -In the second form, \fB"keyseq"\fP:\^\fIfunction\-name\fP or \fImacro\fP, -.B keyseq -differs from -.B keyname -above in that strings denoting -an entire key sequence may be specified by placing the sequence -within double quotes. Some GNU Emacs style key escapes can be -used, as in the following example, but the symbolic character names -are not recognized. -.sp -.RS -"\eC\-u": universal\-argument -.br -"\eC\-x\eC\-r": re\-read\-init\-file -.br -"\ee[11~": "Function Key 1" -.RE -.PP -In this example, -.I C\-u -is again bound to the function -.BR universal\-argument . -.I "C\-x C\-r" -is bound to the function -.BR re\-read\-init\-file , -and -.I "ESC [ 1 1 ~" -is bound to insert the text -.if t \f(CWFunction Key 1\fP. -.if n ``Function Key 1''. -.PP -The full set of GNU Emacs style escape sequences is -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \eC\- -control prefix -.TP -.B \eM\- -meta prefix -.TP -.B \ee -an escape character -.TP -.B \e\e -backslash -.TP -.B \e" -literal " -.TP -.B \e\(aq -literal \(aq -.RE -.PD -.PP -In addition to the GNU Emacs style escape sequences, a second -set of backslash escapes is available: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \ea -alert (bell) -.TP -.B \eb -backspace -.TP -.B \ed -delete -.TP -.B \ef -form feed -.TP -.B \en -newline -.TP -.B \er -carriage return -.TP -.B \et -horizontal tab -.TP -.B \ev -vertical tab -.TP -.B \e\fInnn\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the octal value \fInnn\fP -(one to three digits) -.TP -.B \ex\fIHH\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal value \fIHH\fP -(one or two hex digits) -.RE -.PD -.PP -When entering the text of a macro, single or double quotes must -be used to indicate a macro definition. -Unquoted text is assumed to be a function name. -In the macro body, the backslash escapes described above are expanded. -Backslash will quote any other character in the macro text, -including " and \(aq. -.PP -.B Bash -allows the current readline key bindings to be displayed or modified -with the -.B bind -builtin command. The editing mode may be switched during interactive -use by using the -.B \-o -option to the -.B set -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). -.SS "Readline Variables" -.PP -Readline has variables that can be used to further customize its -behavior. A variable may be set in the -.I inputrc -file with a statement of the form -.RS -.PP -\fBset\fP \fIvariable\-name\fP \fIvalue\fP -.RE -.PP -Except where noted, readline variables can take the values -.B On -or -.B Off -(without regard to case). -Unrecognized variable names are ignored. -When a variable value is read, empty or null values, "on" (case-insensitive), -and "1" are equivalent to \fBOn\fP. All other values are equivalent to -\fBOff\fP. -The variables and their default values are: -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B bell\-style (audible) -Controls what happens when readline wants to ring the terminal bell. -If set to \fBnone\fP, readline never rings the bell. If set to -\fBvisible\fP, readline uses a visible bell if one is available. -If set to \fBaudible\fP, readline attempts to ring the terminal's bell. -.TP -.B bind\-tty\-special\-chars (On) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline attempts to bind the control characters -treated specially by the kernel's terminal driver to their readline -equivalents. -.TP -.B colored\-stats (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline displays possible completions using different -colors to indicate their file type. -The color definitions are taken from the value of the \fBLS_COLORS\fP -environment variable. -.TP -.B comment\-begin (``#'') -The string that is inserted when the readline -.B insert\-comment -command is executed. -This command is bound to -.B M\-# -in emacs mode and to -.B # -in vi command mode. -.TP -.B completion\-ignore\-case (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline performs filename matching and completion -in a case\-insensitive fashion. -.TP -.B completion\-prefix\-display\-length (0) -The length in characters of the common prefix of a list of possible -completions that is displayed without modification. When set to a -value greater than zero, common prefixes longer than this value are -replaced with an ellipsis when displaying possible completions. -.TP -.B completion\-query\-items (100) -This determines when the user is queried about viewing -the number of possible completions -generated by the \fBpossible\-completions\fP command. -It may be set to any integer value greater than or equal to -zero. If the number of possible completions is greater than -or equal to the value of this variable, the user is asked whether -or not he wishes to view them; otherwise they are simply listed -on the terminal. -.TP -.B convert\-meta (On) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will convert characters with the -eighth bit set to an ASCII key sequence -by stripping the eighth bit and prefixing an -escape character (in effect, using escape as the \fImeta prefix\fP). -.TP -.B disable\-completion (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will inhibit word completion. Completion -characters will be inserted into the line as if they had been -mapped to \fBself-insert\fP. -.TP -.B editing\-mode (emacs) -Controls whether readline begins with a set of key bindings similar -to \fIEmacs\fP or \fIvi\fP. -.B editing\-mode -can be set to either -.B emacs -or -.BR vi . -.TP -.B echo\-control\-characters (On) -When set to \fBOn\fP, on operating systems that indicate they support it, -readline echoes a character corresponding to a signal generated from the -keyboard. -.TP -.B enable\-keypad (Off) -When set to \fBOn\fP, readline will try to enable the application -keypad when it is called. Some systems need this to enable the -arrow keys. -.TP -.B enable\-meta\-key (On) -When set to \fBOn\fP, readline will try to enable any meta modifier -key the terminal claims to support when it is called. On many terminals, -the meta key is used to send eight-bit characters. -.TP -.B expand\-tilde (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, tilde expansion is performed when readline -attempts word completion. -.TP -.B history\-preserve\-point (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, the history code attempts to place point at the -same location on each history line retrieved with \fBprevious-history\fP -or \fBnext-history\fP. -.TP -.B history\-size (0) -Set the maximum number of history entries saved in the history list. -If set to zero, any existing history entries are deleted and no new entries -are saved. -If set to a value less than zero, the number of history entries is not -limited. -By default, the number of history entries is not limited. -.TP -.B horizontal\-scroll\-mode (Off) -When set to \fBOn\fP, makes readline use a single line for display, -scrolling the input horizontally on a single screen line when it -becomes longer than the screen width rather than wrapping to a new line. -.TP -.B input\-meta (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will enable eight-bit input (that is, -it will not strip the high bit from the characters it reads), -regardless of what the terminal claims it can support. The name -.B meta\-flag -is a synonym for this variable. -.TP -.B isearch\-terminators (``C\-[C\-J'') -The string of characters that should terminate an incremental -search without subsequently executing the character as a command. -If this variable has not been given a value, the characters -\fIESC\fP and \fIC\-J\fP will terminate an incremental search. -.TP -.B keymap (emacs) -Set the current readline keymap. The set of valid keymap names is -\fIemacs, emacs\-standard, emacs\-meta, emacs\-ctlx, vi, -vi\-command\fP, and -.IR vi\-insert . -\fIvi\fP is equivalent to \fIvi\-command\fP; \fIemacs\fP is -equivalent to \fIemacs\-standard\fP. The default value is -.IR emacs ; -the value of -.B editing\-mode -also affects the default keymap. -.TP -.B keyseq\-timeout (500) -Specifies the duration \fIreadline\fP will wait for a character when reading an -ambiguous key sequence (one that can form a complete key sequence using -the input read so far, or can take additional input to complete a longer -key sequence). -If no input is received within the timeout, \fIreadline\fP will use the shorter -but complete key sequence. -The value is specified in milliseconds, so a value of 1000 means that -\fIreadline\fP will wait one second for additional input. -If this variable is set to a value less than or equal to zero, or to a -non-numeric value, \fIreadline\fP will wait until another key is pressed to -decide which key sequence to complete. -.TP -.B mark\-directories (On) -If set to \fBOn\fP, completed directory names have a slash -appended. -.TP -.B mark\-modified\-lines (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, history lines that have been modified are displayed -with a preceding asterisk (\fB*\fP). -.TP -.B mark\-symlinked\-directories (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, completed names which are symbolic links to directories -have a slash appended (subject to the value of -\fBmark\-directories\fP). -.TP -.B match\-hidden\-files (On) -This variable, when set to \fBOn\fP, causes readline to match files whose -names begin with a `.' (hidden files) when performing filename -completion. -If set to \fBOff\fP, the leading `.' must be -supplied by the user in the filename to be completed. -.TP -.B menu\-complete\-display\-prefix (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, menu completion displays the common prefix of the -list of possible completions (which may be empty) before cycling through -the list. -.TP -.B output\-meta (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will display characters with the -eighth bit set directly rather than as a meta-prefixed escape -sequence. -.TP -.B page\-completions (On) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline uses an internal \fImore\fP-like pager -to display a screenful of possible completions at a time. -.TP -.B print\-completions\-horizontally (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will display completions with matches -sorted horizontally in alphabetical order, rather than down the screen. -.TP -.B revert\-all\-at\-newline (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, readline will undo all changes to history lines -before returning when \fBaccept\-line\fP is executed. By default, -history lines may be modified and retain individual undo lists across -calls to \fBreadline\fP. -.TP -.B show\-all\-if\-ambiguous (Off) -This alters the default behavior of the completion functions. If -set to -.BR On , -words which have more than one possible completion cause the -matches to be listed immediately instead of ringing the bell. -.TP -.B show\-all\-if\-unmodified (Off) -This alters the default behavior of the completion functions in -a fashion similar to \fBshow\-all\-if\-ambiguous\fP. -If set to -.BR On , -words which have more than one possible completion without any -possible partial completion (the possible completions don't share -a common prefix) cause the matches to be listed immediately instead -of ringing the bell. -.TP -.B show\-mode\-in\-prompt (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, add a character to the beginning of the prompt -indicating the editing mode: emacs (@), vi command (:) or vi -insertion (+). -.TP -.B skip\-completed\-text (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, this alters the default completion behavior when -inserting a single match into the line. It's only active when -performing completion in the middle of a word. If enabled, readline -does not insert characters from the completion that match characters -after point in the word being completed, so portions of the word -following the cursor are not duplicated. -.TP -.B visible\-stats (Off) -If set to \fBOn\fP, a character denoting a file's type as reported -by \fIstat\fP(2) is appended to the filename when listing possible -completions. -.PD -.SS "Readline Conditional Constructs" -.PP -Readline implements a facility similar in spirit to the conditional -compilation features of the C preprocessor which allows key -bindings and variable settings to be performed as the result -of tests. There are four parser directives used. -.IP \fB$if\fP -The -.B $if -construct allows bindings to be made based on the -editing mode, the terminal being used, or the application using -readline. The text of the test extends to the end of the line; -no characters are required to isolate it. -.RS -.IP \fBmode\fP -The \fBmode=\fP form of the \fB$if\fP directive is used to test -whether readline is in emacs or vi mode. -This may be used in conjunction -with the \fBset keymap\fP command, for instance, to set bindings in -the \fIemacs\-standard\fP and \fIemacs\-ctlx\fP keymaps only if -readline is starting out in emacs mode. -.IP \fBterm\fP -The \fBterm=\fP form may be used to include terminal-specific -key bindings, perhaps to bind the key sequences output by the -terminal's function keys. The word on the right side of the -.B = -is tested against the both full name of the terminal and the portion -of the terminal name before the first \fB\-\fP. This allows -.I sun -to match both -.I sun -and -.IR sun\-cmd , -for instance. -.IP \fBapplication\fP -The \fBapplication\fP construct is used to include -application-specific settings. Each program using the readline -library sets the \fIapplication name\fP, and an initialization -file can test for a particular value. -This could be used to bind key sequences to functions useful for -a specific program. For instance, the following command adds a -key sequence that quotes the current or previous word in \fBbash\fP: -.sp 1 -.RS -.nf -\fB$if\fP Bash -# Quote the current or previous word -"\eC\-xq": "\eeb\e"\eef\e"" -\fB$endif\fP -.fi -.RE -.RE -.IP \fB$endif\fP -This command, as seen in the previous example, terminates an -\fB$if\fP command. -.IP \fB$else\fP -Commands in this branch of the \fB$if\fP directive are executed if -the test fails. -.IP \fB$include\fP -This directive takes a single filename as an argument and reads commands -and bindings from that file. For example, the following directive -would read \fI/etc/inputrc\fP: -.sp 1 -.RS -.nf -\fB$include\fP \^ \fI/etc/inputrc\fP -.fi -.RE -.SS Searching -.PP -Readline provides commands for searching through the command history -(see -.SM -.B HISTORY -below) for lines containing a specified string. -There are two search modes: -.I incremental -and -.IR non-incremental . -.PP -Incremental searches begin before the user has finished typing the -search string. -As each character of the search string is typed, readline displays -the next entry from the history matching the string typed so far. -An incremental search requires only as many characters as needed to -find the desired history entry. -The characters present in the value of the \fBisearch-terminators\fP -variable are used to terminate an incremental search. -If that variable has not been assigned a value the Escape and -Control-J characters will terminate an incremental search. -Control-G will abort an incremental search and restore the original -line. -When the search is terminated, the history entry containing the -search string becomes the current line. -.PP -To find other matching entries in the history list, type Control-S or -Control-R as appropriate. -This will search backward or forward in the history for the next -entry matching the search string typed so far. -Any other key sequence bound to a readline command will terminate -the search and execute that command. -For instance, a \fInewline\fP will terminate the search and accept -the line, thereby executing the command from the history list. -.PP -Readline remembers the last incremental search string. If two -Control-Rs are typed without any intervening characters defining a -new search string, any remembered search string is used. -.PP -Non-incremental searches read the entire search string before starting -to search for matching history lines. The search string may be -typed by the user or be part of the contents of the current line. -.SS "Readline Command Names" -.PP -The following is a list of the names of the commands and the default -key sequences to which they are bound. -Command names without an accompanying key sequence are unbound by default. -In the following descriptions, \fIpoint\fP refers to the current cursor -position, and \fImark\fP refers to a cursor position saved by the -\fBset\-mark\fP command. -The text between the point and mark is referred to as the \fIregion\fP. -.SS Commands for Moving -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B beginning\-of\-line (C\-a) -Move to the start of the current line. -.TP -.B end\-of\-line (C\-e) -Move to the end of the line. -.TP -.B forward\-char (C\-f) -Move forward a character. -.TP -.B backward\-char (C\-b) -Move back a character. -.TP -.B forward\-word (M\-f) -Move forward to the end of the next word. Words are composed of -alphanumeric characters (letters and digits). -.TP -.B backward\-word (M\-b) -Move back to the start of the current or previous word. -Words are composed of alphanumeric characters (letters and digits). -.TP -.B shell\-forward\-word -Move forward to the end of the next word. -Words are delimited by non-quoted shell metacharacters. -.TP -.B shell\-backward\-word -Move back to the start of the current or previous word. -Words are delimited by non-quoted shell metacharacters. -.TP -.B clear\-screen (C\-l) -Clear the screen leaving the current line at the top of the screen. -With an argument, refresh the current line without clearing the -screen. -.TP -.B redraw\-current\-line -Refresh the current line. -.PD -.SS Commands for Manipulating the History -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B accept\-line (Newline, Return) -Accept the line regardless of where the cursor is. If this line is -non-empty, add it to the history list according to the state of the -.SM -.B HISTCONTROL -variable. If the line is a modified history -line, then restore the history line to its original state. -.TP -.B previous\-history (C\-p) -Fetch the previous command from the history list, moving back in -the list. -.TP -.B next\-history (C\-n) -Fetch the next command from the history list, moving forward in the -list. -.TP -.B beginning\-of\-history (M\-<) -Move to the first line in the history. -.TP -.B end\-of\-history (M\->) -Move to the end of the input history, i.e., the line currently being -entered. -.TP -.B reverse\-search\-history (C\-r) -Search backward starting at the current line and moving `up' through -the history as necessary. This is an incremental search. -.TP -.B forward\-search\-history (C\-s) -Search forward starting at the current line and moving `down' through -the history as necessary. This is an incremental search. -.TP -.B non\-incremental\-reverse\-search\-history (M\-p) -Search backward through the history starting at the current line -using a non-incremental search for a string supplied by the user. -.TP -.B non\-incremental\-forward\-search\-history (M\-n) -Search forward through the history using a non-incremental search for -a string supplied by the user. -.TP -.B history\-search\-forward -Search forward through the history for the string of characters -between the start of the current line and the point. -This is a non-incremental search. -.TP -.B history\-search\-backward -Search backward through the history for the string of characters -between the start of the current line and the point. -This is a non-incremental search. -.TP -.B yank\-nth\-arg (M\-C\-y) -Insert the first argument to the previous command (usually -the second word on the previous line) at point. -With an argument -.IR n , -insert the \fIn\fPth word from the previous command (the words -in the previous command begin with word 0). A negative argument -inserts the \fIn\fPth word from the end of the previous command. -Once the argument \fIn\fP is computed, the argument is extracted -as if the "!\fIn\fP" history expansion had been specified. -.TP -.B -yank\-last\-arg (M\-.\^, M\-_\^) -Insert the last argument to the previous command (the last word of -the previous history entry). -With a numeric argument, behave exactly like \fByank\-nth\-arg\fP. -Successive calls to \fByank\-last\-arg\fP move back through the history -list, inserting the last word (or the word specified by the argument to -the first call) of each line in turn. -Any numeric argument supplied to these successive calls determines -the direction to move through the history. A negative argument switches -the direction through the history (back or forward). -The history expansion facilities are used to extract the last word, -as if the "!$" history expansion had been specified. -.TP -.B shell\-expand\-line (M\-C\-e) -Expand the line as the shell does. This -performs alias and history expansion as well as all of the shell -word expansions. See -.SM -.B HISTORY EXPANSION -below for a description of history expansion. -.TP -.B history\-expand\-line (M\-^) -Perform history expansion on the current line. -See -.SM -.B HISTORY EXPANSION -below for a description of history expansion. -.TP -.B magic\-space -Perform history expansion on the current line and insert a space. -See -.SM -.B HISTORY EXPANSION -below for a description of history expansion. -.TP -.B alias\-expand\-line -Perform alias expansion on the current line. -See -.SM -.B ALIASES -above for a description of alias expansion. -.TP -.B history\-and\-alias\-expand\-line -Perform history and alias expansion on the current line. -.TP -.B insert\-last\-argument (M\-.\^, M\-_\^) -A synonym for \fByank\-last\-arg\fP. -.TP -.B operate\-and\-get\-next (C\-o) -Accept the current line for execution and fetch the next line -relative to the current line from the history for editing. Any -argument is ignored. -.TP -.B edit\-and\-execute\-command (C\-xC\-e) -Invoke an editor on the current command line, and execute the result as shell -commands. -\fBBash\fP attempts to invoke -.SM -.BR $VISUAL , -.SM -.BR $EDITOR , -and \fIemacs\fP as the editor, in that order. -.PD -.SS Commands for Changing Text -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B delete\-char (C\-d) -Delete the character at point. If point is at the -beginning of the line, there are no characters in the line, and -the last character typed was not bound to \fBdelete\-char\fP, -then return -.SM -.BR EOF . -.TP -.B backward\-delete\-char (Rubout) -Delete the character behind the cursor. When given a numeric argument, -save the deleted text on the kill ring. -.TP -.B forward\-backward\-delete\-char -Delete the character under the cursor, unless the cursor is at the -end of the line, in which case the character behind the cursor is -deleted. -.TP -.B quoted\-insert (C\-q, C\-v) -Add the next character typed to the line verbatim. This is -how to insert characters like \fBC\-q\fP, for example. -.TP -.B tab\-insert (C\-v TAB) -Insert a tab character. -.TP -.B self\-insert (a,\ b,\ A,\ 1,\ !,\ ...) -Insert the character typed. -.TP -.B transpose\-chars (C\-t) -Drag the character before point forward over the character at point, -moving point forward as well. -If point is at the end of the line, then this transposes -the two characters before point. -Negative arguments have no effect. -.TP -.B transpose\-words (M\-t) -Drag the word before point past the word after point, -moving point over that word as well. -If point is at the end of the line, this transposes -the last two words on the line. -.TP -.B upcase\-word (M\-u) -Uppercase the current (or following) word. With a negative argument, -uppercase the previous word, but do not move point. -.TP -.B downcase\-word (M\-l) -Lowercase the current (or following) word. With a negative argument, -lowercase the previous word, but do not move point. -.TP -.B capitalize\-word (M\-c) -Capitalize the current (or following) word. With a negative argument, -capitalize the previous word, but do not move point. -.TP -.B overwrite\-mode -Toggle overwrite mode. With an explicit positive numeric argument, -switches to overwrite mode. With an explicit non-positive numeric -argument, switches to insert mode. This command affects only -\fBemacs\fP mode; \fBvi\fP mode does overwrite differently. -Each call to \fIreadline()\fP starts in insert mode. -In overwrite mode, characters bound to \fBself\-insert\fP replace -the text at point rather than pushing the text to the right. -Characters bound to \fBbackward\-delete\-char\fP replace the character -before point with a space. By default, this command is unbound. -.PD -.SS Killing and Yanking -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B kill\-line (C\-k) -Kill the text from point to the end of the line. -.TP -.B backward\-kill\-line (C\-x Rubout) -Kill backward to the beginning of the line. -.TP -.B unix\-line\-discard (C\-u) -Kill backward from point to the beginning of the line. -The killed text is saved on the kill-ring. -.\" There is no real difference between this and backward-kill-line -.TP -.B kill\-whole\-line -Kill all characters on the current line, no matter where point is. -.TP -.B kill\-word (M\-d) -Kill from point to the end of the current word, or if between -words, to the end of the next word. -Word boundaries are the same as those used by \fBforward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B backward\-kill\-word (M\-Rubout) -Kill the word behind point. -Word boundaries are the same as those used by \fBbackward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B shell\-kill\-word (M\-d) -Kill from point to the end of the current word, or if between -words, to the end of the next word. -Word boundaries are the same as those used by \fBshell\-forward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B shell\-backward\-kill\-word (M\-Rubout) -Kill the word behind point. -Word boundaries are the same as those used by \fBshell\-backward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B unix\-word\-rubout (C\-w) -Kill the word behind point, using white space as a word boundary. -The killed text is saved on the kill-ring. -.TP -.B unix\-filename\-rubout -Kill the word behind point, using white space and the slash character -as the word boundaries. -The killed text is saved on the kill-ring. -.TP -.B delete\-horizontal\-space (M\-\e) -Delete all spaces and tabs around point. -.TP -.B kill\-region -Kill the text in the current region. -.TP -.B copy\-region\-as\-kill -Copy the text in the region to the kill buffer. -.TP -.B copy\-backward\-word -Copy the word before point to the kill buffer. -The word boundaries are the same as \fBbackward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B copy\-forward\-word -Copy the word following point to the kill buffer. -The word boundaries are the same as \fBforward\-word\fP. -.TP -.B yank (C\-y) -Yank the top of the kill ring into the buffer at point. -.TP -.B yank\-pop (M\-y) -Rotate the kill ring, and yank the new top. Only works following -.B yank -or -.BR yank\-pop . -.PD -.SS Numeric Arguments -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B digit\-argument (M\-0, M\-1, ..., M\-\-) -Add this digit to the argument already accumulating, or start a new -argument. M\-\- starts a negative argument. -.TP -.B universal\-argument -This is another way to specify an argument. -If this command is followed by one or more digits, optionally with a -leading minus sign, those digits define the argument. -If the command is followed by digits, executing -.B universal\-argument -again ends the numeric argument, but is otherwise ignored. -As a special case, if this command is immediately followed by a -character that is neither a digit or minus sign, the argument count -for the next command is multiplied by four. -The argument count is initially one, so executing this function the -first time makes the argument count four, a second time makes the -argument count sixteen, and so on. -.PD -.SS Completing -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B complete (TAB) -Attempt to perform completion on the text before point. -.B Bash -attempts completion treating the text as a variable (if the -text begins with \fB$\fP), username (if the text begins with -\fB~\fP), hostname (if the text begins with \fB@\fP), or -command (including aliases and functions) in turn. If none -of these produces a match, filename completion is attempted. -.TP -.B possible\-completions (M\-?) -List the possible completions of the text before point. -.TP -.B insert\-completions (M\-*) -Insert all completions of the text before point -that would have been generated by -\fBpossible\-completions\fP. -.TP -.B menu\-complete -Similar to \fBcomplete\fP, but replaces the word to be completed -with a single match from the list of possible completions. -Repeated execution of \fBmenu\-complete\fP steps through the list -of possible completions, inserting each match in turn. -At the end of the list of completions, the bell is rung -(subject to the setting of \fBbell\-style\fP) -and the original text is restored. -An argument of \fIn\fP moves \fIn\fP positions forward in the list -of matches; a negative argument may be used to move backward -through the list. -This command is intended to be bound to \fBTAB\fP, but is unbound -by default. -.TP -.B menu\-complete\-backward -Identical to \fBmenu\-complete\fP, but moves backward through the list -of possible completions, as if \fBmenu\-complete\fP had been given a -negative argument. This command is unbound by default. -.TP -.B delete\-char\-or\-list -Deletes the character under the cursor if not at the beginning or -end of the line (like \fBdelete\-char\fP). -If at the end of the line, behaves identically to -\fBpossible\-completions\fP. -This command is unbound by default. -.TP -.B complete\-filename (M\-/) -Attempt filename completion on the text before point. -.TP -.B possible\-filename\-completions (C\-x /) -List the possible completions of the text before point, -treating it as a filename. -.TP -.B complete\-username (M\-~) -Attempt completion on the text before point, treating -it as a username. -.TP -.B possible\-username\-completions (C\-x ~) -List the possible completions of the text before point, -treating it as a username. -.TP -.B complete\-variable (M\-$) -Attempt completion on the text before point, treating -it as a shell variable. -.TP -.B possible\-variable\-completions (C\-x $) -List the possible completions of the text before point, -treating it as a shell variable. -.TP -.B complete\-hostname (M\-@) -Attempt completion on the text before point, treating -it as a hostname. -.TP -.B possible\-hostname\-completions (C\-x @) -List the possible completions of the text before point, -treating it as a hostname. -.TP -.B complete\-command (M\-!) -Attempt completion on the text before point, treating -it as a command name. Command completion attempts to -match the text against aliases, reserved words, shell -functions, shell builtins, and finally executable filenames, -in that order. -.TP -.B possible\-command\-completions (C\-x !) -List the possible completions of the text before point, -treating it as a command name. -.TP -.B dynamic\-complete\-history (M\-TAB) -Attempt completion on the text before point, comparing -the text against lines from the history list for possible -completion matches. -.TP -.B dabbrev\-expand -Attempt menu completion on the text before point, comparing -the text against lines from the history list for possible -completion matches. -.TP -.B complete\-into\-braces (M\-{) -Perform filename completion and insert the list of possible completions -enclosed within braces so the list is available to the shell (see -.B Brace Expansion -above). -.PD -.SS Keyboard Macros -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B start\-kbd\-macro (C\-x (\^) -Begin saving the characters typed into the current keyboard macro. -.TP -.B end\-kbd\-macro (C\-x )\^) -Stop saving the characters typed into the current keyboard macro -and store the definition. -.TP -.B call\-last\-kbd\-macro (C\-x e) -Re-execute the last keyboard macro defined, by making the characters -in the macro appear as if typed at the keyboard. -.B print\-last\-kbd\-macro () -Print the last keyboard macro defined in a format suitable for the -\fIinputrc\fP file. -.PD -.SS Miscellaneous -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B re\-read\-init\-file (C\-x C\-r) -Read in the contents of the \fIinputrc\fP file, and incorporate -any bindings or variable assignments found there. -.TP -.B abort (C\-g) -Abort the current editing command and -ring the terminal's bell (subject to the setting of -.BR bell\-style ). -.TP -.B do\-uppercase\-version (M\-a, M\-b, M\-\fIx\fP, ...) -If the metafied character \fIx\fP is lowercase, run the command -that is bound to the corresponding uppercase character. -.TP -.B prefix\-meta (ESC) -Metafy the next character typed. -.SM -.B ESC -.B f -is equivalent to -.BR Meta\-f . -.TP -.B undo (C\-_, C\-x C\-u) -Incremental undo, separately remembered for each line. -.TP -.B revert\-line (M\-r) -Undo all changes made to this line. This is like executing the -.B undo -command enough times to return the line to its initial state. -.TP -.B tilde\-expand (M\-&) -Perform tilde expansion on the current word. -.TP -.B set\-mark (C\-@, M\-) -Set the mark to the point. If a -numeric argument is supplied, the mark is set to that position. -.TP -.B exchange\-point\-and\-mark (C\-x C\-x) -Swap the point with the mark. The current cursor position is set to -the saved position, and the old cursor position is saved as the mark. -.TP -.B character\-search (C\-]) -A character is read and point is moved to the next occurrence of that -character. A negative count searches for previous occurrences. -.TP -.B character\-search\-backward (M\-C\-]) -A character is read and point is moved to the previous occurrence of that -character. A negative count searches for subsequent occurrences. -.TP -.B skip\-csi\-sequence -Read enough characters to consume a multi-key sequence such as those -defined for keys like Home and End. Such sequences begin with a -Control Sequence Indicator (CSI), usually ESC\-[. If this sequence is -bound to "\e[", keys producing such sequences will have no effect -unless explicitly bound to a readline command, instead of inserting -stray characters into the editing buffer. This is unbound by default, -but usually bound to ESC\-[. -.TP -.B insert\-comment (M\-#) -Without a numeric argument, the value of the readline -.B comment\-begin -variable is inserted at the beginning of the current line. -If a numeric argument is supplied, this command acts as a toggle: if -the characters at the beginning of the line do not match the value -of \fBcomment\-begin\fP, the value is inserted, otherwise -the characters in \fBcomment\-begin\fP are deleted from the beginning of -the line. -In either case, the line is accepted as if a newline had been typed. -The default value of -\fBcomment\-begin\fP causes this command to make the current line -a shell comment. -If a numeric argument causes the comment character to be removed, the line -will be executed by the shell. -.TP -.B glob\-complete\-word (M\-g) -The word before point is treated as a pattern for pathname expansion, -with an asterisk implicitly appended. This pattern is used to -generate a list of matching filenames for possible completions. -.TP -.B glob\-expand\-word (C\-x *) -The word before point is treated as a pattern for pathname expansion, -and the list of matching filenames is inserted, replacing the word. -If a numeric argument is supplied, an asterisk is appended before -pathname expansion. -.TP -.B glob\-list\-expansions (C\-x g) -The list of expansions that would have been generated by -.B glob\-expand\-word -is displayed, and the line is redrawn. -If a numeric argument is supplied, an asterisk is appended before -pathname expansion. -.TP -.B dump\-functions -Print all of the functions and their key bindings to the -readline output stream. If a numeric argument is supplied, -the output is formatted in such a way that it can be made part -of an \fIinputrc\fP file. -.TP -.B dump\-variables -Print all of the settable readline variables and their values to the -readline output stream. If a numeric argument is supplied, -the output is formatted in such a way that it can be made part -of an \fIinputrc\fP file. -.TP -.B dump\-macros -Print all of the readline key sequences bound to macros and the -strings they output. If a numeric argument is supplied, -the output is formatted in such a way that it can be made part -of an \fIinputrc\fP file. -.TP -.B display\-shell\-version (C\-x C\-v) -Display version information about the current instance of -.BR bash . -.PD -.SS Programmable Completion -.PP -When word completion is attempted for an argument to a command for -which a completion specification (a \fIcompspec\fP) has been defined -using the \fBcomplete\fP builtin (see -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below), the programmable completion facilities are invoked. -.PP -First, the command name is identified. -If the command word is the empty string (completion attempted at the -beginning of an empty line), any compspec defined with -the \fB\-E\fP option to \fBcomplete\fP is used. -If a compspec has been defined for that command, the -compspec is used to generate the list of possible completions for the word. -If the command word is a full pathname, a compspec for the full -pathname is searched for first. -If no compspec is found for the full pathname, an attempt is made to -find a compspec for the portion following the final slash. -If those searches do not result in a compspec, any compspec defined with -the \fB\-D\fP option to \fBcomplete\fP is used as the default. -.PP -Once a compspec has been found, it is used to generate the list of -matching words. -If a compspec is not found, the default \fBbash\fP completion as -described above under \fBCompleting\fP is performed. -.PP -First, the actions specified by the compspec are used. -Only matches which are prefixed by the word being completed are -returned. -When the -.B \-f -or -.B \-d -option is used for filename or directory name completion, the shell -variable -.SM -.B FIGNORE -is used to filter the matches. -.PP -Any completions specified by a pathname expansion pattern to the -\fB\-G\fP option are generated next. -The words generated by the pattern need not match the word -being completed. -The -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -shell variable is not used to filter the matches, but the -.SM -.B FIGNORE -variable is used. -.PP -Next, the string specified as the argument to the \fB\-W\fP option -is considered. -The string is first split using the characters in the -.SM -.B IFS -special variable as delimiters. -Shell quoting is honored. -Each word is then expanded using -brace expansion, tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, and arithmetic expansion, -as described above under -.SM -.BR EXPANSION . -The results are split using the rules described above under -\fBWord Splitting\fP. -The results of the expansion are prefix-matched against the word being -completed, and the matching words become the possible completions. -.PP -After these matches have been generated, any shell function or command -specified with the \fB\-F\fP and \fB\-C\fP options is invoked. -When the command or function is invoked, the -.SM -.BR COMP_LINE , -.SM -.BR COMP_POINT , -.SM -.BR COMP_KEY , -and -.SM -.B COMP_TYPE -variables are assigned values as described above under -\fBShell Variables\fP. -If a shell function is being invoked, the -.SM -.B COMP_WORDS -and -.SM -.B COMP_CWORD -variables are also set. -When the function or command is invoked, -the first argument (\fB$1\fP) is the name of the command whose arguments are -being completed, -the second argument (\fB$2\fP) is the word being completed, -and the third argument (\fB$3\fP) is the word preceding the word being -completed on the current command line. -No filtering of the generated completions against the word being completed -is performed; the function or command has complete freedom in generating -the matches. -.PP -Any function specified with \fB\-F\fP is invoked first. -The function may use any of the shell facilities, including the -\fBcompgen\fP builtin described below, to generate the matches. -It must put the possible completions in the -.SM -.B COMPREPLY -array variable, one per array element. -.PP -Next, any command specified with the \fB\-C\fP option is invoked -in an environment equivalent to command substitution. -It should print a list of completions, one per line, to the -standard output. -Backslash may be used to escape a newline, if necessary. -.PP -After all of the possible completions are generated, any filter -specified with the \fB\-X\fP option is applied to the list. -The filter is a pattern as used for pathname expansion; a \fB&\fP -in the pattern is replaced with the text of the word being completed. -A literal \fB&\fP may be escaped with a backslash; the backslash -is removed before attempting a match. -Any completion that matches the pattern will be removed from the list. -A leading \fB!\fP negates the pattern; in this case any completion -not matching the pattern will be removed. -.PP -Finally, any prefix and suffix specified with the \fB\-P\fP and \fB\-S\fP -options are added to each member of the completion list, and the result is -returned to the readline completion code as the list of possible -completions. -.PP -If the previously-applied actions do not generate any matches, and the -\fB\-o dirnames\fP option was supplied to \fBcomplete\fP when the -compspec was defined, directory name completion is attempted. -.PP -If the \fB\-o plusdirs\fP option was supplied to \fBcomplete\fP when the -compspec was defined, directory name completion is attempted and any -matches are added to the results of the other actions. -.PP -By default, if a compspec is found, whatever it generates is returned -to the completion code as the full set of possible completions. -The default \fBbash\fP completions are not attempted, and the readline -default of filename completion is disabled. -If the \fB\-o bashdefault\fP option was supplied to \fBcomplete\fP when -the compspec was defined, the \fBbash\fP default completions are attempted -if the compspec generates no matches. -If the \fB\-o default\fP option was supplied to \fBcomplete\fP when the -compspec was defined, readline's default completion will be performed -if the compspec (and, if attempted, the default \fBbash\fP completions) -generate no matches. -.PP -When a compspec indicates that directory name completion is desired, -the programmable completion functions force readline to append a slash -to completed names which are symbolic links to directories, subject to -the value of the \fBmark\-directories\fP readline variable, regardless -of the setting of the \fBmark-symlinked\-directories\fP readline variable. -.PP -There is some support for dynamically modifying completions. This is -most useful when used in combination with a default completion specified -with \fBcomplete -D\fP. -It's possible for shell functions executed as completion -handlers to indicate that completion should be retried by returning an -exit status of 124. If a shell function returns 124, and changes -the compspec associated with the command on which completion is being -attempted (supplied as the first argument when the function is executed), -programmable completion restarts from the beginning, with an -attempt to find a new compspec for that command. This allows a set of -completions to be built dynamically as completion is attempted, rather than -being loaded all at once. -.PP -For instance, assuming that there is a library of compspecs, each kept in a -file corresponding to the name of the command, the following default -completion function would load completions dynamically: -.PP -\f(CW_completion_loader() -.br -{ -.br - . "/etc/bash_completion.d/$1.sh" >/dev/null 2>&1 && return 124 -.br -} -.br -complete -D -F _completion_loader -o bashdefault -o default -.br -\fP -.SH HISTORY -When the -.B \-o history -option to the -.B set -builtin is enabled, the shell provides access to the -\fIcommand history\fP, -the list of commands previously typed. -The value of the -.SM -.B HISTSIZE -variable is used as the -number of commands to save in a history list. -The text of the last -.SM -.B HISTSIZE -commands (default 500) is saved. The shell -stores each command in the history list prior to parameter and -variable expansion (see -.SM -.B EXPANSION -above) but after history expansion is performed, subject to the -values of the shell variables -.SM -.B HISTIGNORE -and -.SM -.BR HISTCONTROL . -.PP -On startup, the history is initialized from the file named by -the variable -.SM -.B HISTFILE -(default \fI~/.bash_history\fP). -The file named by the value of -.SM -.B HISTFILE -is truncated, if necessary, to contain no more than -the number of lines specified by the value of -.SM -.BR HISTFILESIZE . -If \fBHISTFILESIZE\fP is unset, or set to null, a non-numeric value, -or a numeric value less than zero, the history file is not truncated. -When the history file is read, -lines beginning with the history comment character followed immediately -by a digit are interpreted as timestamps for the preceding history line. -These timestamps are optionally displayed depending on the value of the -.SM -.B HISTTIMEFORMAT -variable. -When a shell with history enabled exits, the last -.SM -.B $HISTSIZE -lines are copied from the history list to -.SM -.BR $HISTFILE . -If the -.B histappend -shell option is enabled -(see the description of -.B shopt -under -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -below), the lines are appended to the history file, -otherwise the history file is overwritten. -If -.SM -.B HISTFILE -is unset, or if the history file is unwritable, the history is -not saved. -If the -.SM -.B HISTTIMEFORMAT -variable is set, time stamps are written to the history file, marked -with the history comment character, so -they may be preserved across shell sessions. -This uses the history comment character to distinguish timestamps from -other history lines. -After saving the history, the history file is truncated -to contain no more than -.SM -.B HISTFILESIZE -lines. If -.SM -.B HISTFILESIZE -is unset, or set to null, a non-numeric value, -or a numeric value less than zero, the history file is not truncated. -.PP -The builtin command -.B fc -(see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below) may be used to list or edit and re-execute a portion of -the history list. -The -.B history -builtin may be used to display or modify the history list and -manipulate the history file. -When using command-line editing, search commands -are available in each editing mode that provide access to the -history list. -.PP -The shell allows control over which commands are saved on the history -list. The -.SM -.B HISTCONTROL -and -.SM -.B HISTIGNORE -variables may be set to cause the shell to save only a subset of the -commands entered. -The -.B cmdhist -shell option, if enabled, causes the shell to attempt to save each -line of a multi-line command in the same history entry, adding -semicolons where necessary to preserve syntactic correctness. -The -.B lithist -shell option causes the shell to save the command with embedded newlines -instead of semicolons. See the description of the -.B shopt -builtin below under -.SM -.B "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -for information on setting and unsetting shell options. -.SH "HISTORY EXPANSION" -.PP -The shell supports a history expansion feature that -is similar to the history expansion in -.BR csh. -This section describes what syntax features are available. This -feature is enabled by default for interactive shells, and can be -disabled using the -.B +H -option to the -.B set -builtin command (see -.SM -.B SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS -below). Non-interactive shells do not perform history expansion -by default. -.PP -History expansions introduce words from the history list into -the input stream, making it easy to repeat commands, insert the -arguments to a previous command into the current input line, or -fix errors in previous commands quickly. -.PP -History expansion is performed immediately after a complete line -is read, before the shell breaks it into words. -It takes place in two parts. -The first is to determine which line from the history list -to use during substitution. -The second is to select portions of that line for inclusion into -the current one. -The line selected from the history is the \fIevent\fP, -and the portions of that line that are acted upon are \fIwords\fP. -Various \fImodifiers\fP are available to manipulate the selected words. -The line is broken into words in the same fashion as when reading input, -so that several \fImetacharacter\fP-separated words surrounded by -quotes are considered one word. -History expansions are introduced by the appearance of the -history expansion character, which is \^\fB!\fP\^ by default. -Only backslash (\^\fB\e\fP\^) and single quotes can quote -the history expansion character. -.PP -Several characters inhibit history expansion if found immediately -following the history expansion character, even if it is unquoted: -space, tab, newline, carriage return, and \fB=\fP. -If the \fBextglob\fP shell option is enabled, \fB(\fP will also -inhibit expansion. -.PP -Several shell options settable with the -.B shopt -builtin may be used to tailor the behavior of history expansion. -If the -.B histverify -shell option is enabled (see the description of the -.B shopt -builtin below), and -.B readline -is being used, history substitutions are not immediately passed to -the shell parser. -Instead, the expanded line is reloaded into the -.B readline -editing buffer for further modification. -If -.B readline -is being used, and the -.B histreedit -shell option is enabled, a failed history substitution will be reloaded -into the -.B readline -editing buffer for correction. -The -.B \-p -option to the -.B history -builtin command may be used to see what a history expansion will -do before using it. -The -.B \-s -option to the -.B history -builtin may be used to add commands to the end of the history list -without actually executing them, so that they are available for -subsequent recall. -.PP -The shell allows control of the various characters used by the -history expansion mechanism (see the description of -.B histchars -above under -.BR "Shell Variables" ). -The shell uses -the history comment character to mark history timestamps when -writing the history file. -.SS Event Designators -.PP -An event designator is a reference to a command line entry in the -history list. -Unless the reference is absolute, events are relative to the current -position in the history list. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B ! -Start a history substitution, except when followed by a -.BR blank , -newline, carriage return, = -or ( (when the \fBextglob\fP shell option is enabled using -the \fBshopt\fP builtin). -.TP -.B !\fIn\fR -Refer to command line -.IR n . -.TP -.B !\-\fIn\fR -Refer to the current command minus -.IR n . -.TP -.B !! -Refer to the previous command. This is a synonym for `!\-1'. -.TP -.B !\fIstring\fR -Refer to the most recent command preceding the current position in the -history list starting with -.IR string . -.TP -.B !?\fIstring\fR\fB[?]\fR -Refer to the most recent command preceding the current position in the -history list containing -.IR string . -The trailing \fB?\fP may be omitted if -.I string -is followed immediately by a newline. -.TP -.B \d\s+2^\s-2\u\fIstring1\fP\d\s+2^\s-2\u\fIstring2\fP\d\s+2^\s-2\u -Quick substitution. Repeat the previous command, replacing -.I string1 -with -.IR string2 . -Equivalent to -``!!:s/\fIstring1\fP/\fIstring2\fP/'' -(see \fBModifiers\fP below). -.TP -.B !# -The entire command line typed so far. -.PD -.SS Word Designators -.PP -Word designators are used to select desired words from the event. -A -.B : -separates the event specification from the word designator. -It may be omitted if the word designator begins with a -.BR ^ , -.BR $ , -.BR * , -.BR \- , -or -.BR % . -Words are numbered from the beginning of the line, -with the first word being denoted by 0 (zero). -Words are inserted into the current line separated by single spaces. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP -.B 0 (zero) -The zeroth word. For the shell, this is the command -word. -.TP -.I n -The \fIn\fRth word. -.TP -.B ^ -The first argument. That is, word 1. -.TP -.B $ -The last word. This is usually the last argument, but will expand to the -zeroth word if there is only one word in the line. -.TP -.B % -The word matched by the most recent `?\fIstring\fR?' search. -.TP -.I x\fB\-\fPy -A range of words; `\-\fIy\fR' abbreviates `0\-\fIy\fR'. -.TP -.B * -All of the words but the zeroth. This is a synonym -for `\fI1\-$\fP'. It is not an error to use -.B * -if there is just one -word in the event; the empty string is returned in that case. -.TP -.B x* -Abbreviates \fIx\-$\fP. -.TP -.B x\- -Abbreviates \fIx\-$\fP like \fBx*\fP, but omits the last word. -.PD -.PP -If a word designator is supplied without an event specification, the -previous command is used as the event. -.SS Modifiers -.PP -After the optional word designator, there may appear a sequence of -one or more of the following modifiers, each preceded by a `:'. -.PP -.PD 0 -.PP -.TP -.B h -Remove a trailing filename component, leaving only the head. -.TP -.B t -Remove all leading filename components, leaving the tail. -.TP -.B r -Remove a trailing suffix of the form \fI.xxx\fP, leaving the -basename. -.TP -.B e -Remove all but the trailing suffix. -.TP -.B p -Print the new command but do not execute it. -.TP -.B q -Quote the substituted words, escaping further substitutions. -.TP -.B x -Quote the substituted words as with -.BR q , -but break into words at -.B blanks -and newlines. -.TP -.B s/\fIold\fP/\fInew\fP/ -Substitute -.I new -for the first occurrence of -.I old -in the event line. Any delimiter can be used in place of /. The -final delimiter is optional if it is the last character of the -event line. The delimiter may be quoted in -.I old -and -.I new -with a single backslash. If & appears in -.IR new , -it is replaced by -.IR old . -A single backslash will quote the &. If -.I old -is null, it is set to the last -.I old -substituted, or, if no previous history substitutions took place, -the last -.I string -in a -.B !?\fIstring\fR\fB[?]\fR -search. -.TP -.B & -Repeat the previous substitution. -.TP -.B g -Cause changes to be applied over the entire event line. This is -used in conjunction with `\fB:s\fP' (e.g., `\fB:gs/\fIold\fP/\fInew\fP/\fR') -or `\fB:&\fP'. If used with -`\fB:s\fP', any delimiter can be used -in place of /, and the final delimiter is optional -if it is the last character of the event line. -An \fBa\fP may be used as a synonym for \fBg\fP. -.TP -.B G -Apply the following `\fBs\fP' modifier once to each word in the event line. -.PD -.SH "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" -.\" start of bash_builtins -.zZ -.PP -Unless otherwise noted, each builtin command documented in this -section as accepting options preceded by -.B \- -accepts -.B \-\- -to signify the end of the options. -The \fB:\fP, \fBtrue\fP, \fBfalse\fP, and \fBtest\fP builtins -do not accept options and do not treat \fB\-\-\fP specially. -The \fBexit\fP, \fBlogout\fP, \fBbreak\fP, \fBcontinue\fP, \fBlet\fP, -and \fBshift\fP builtins accept and process arguments beginning with -\fB\-\fP without requiring \fB\-\-\fP. -Other builtins that accept arguments but are not specified as accepting -options interpret arguments beginning with \fB\-\fP as invalid options and -require \fB\-\-\fP to prevent this interpretation. -.sp .5 -.PD 0 -.TP -\fB:\fP [\fIarguments\fP] -.PD -No effect; the command does nothing beyond expanding -.I arguments -and performing any specified -redirections. A zero exit code is returned. -.TP -\fB .\| \fP \fIfilename\fP [\fIarguments\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBsource\fP \fIfilename\fP [\fIarguments\fP] -.PD -Read and execute commands from -.I filename -in the current -shell environment and return the exit status of the last command -executed from -.IR filename . -If -.I filename -does not contain a slash, filenames in -.SM -.B PATH -are used to find the directory containing -.IR filename . -The file searched for in -.SM -.B PATH -need not be executable. -When \fBbash\fP is not in \fIposix mode\fP, the current directory is -searched if no file is found in -.SM -.BR PATH . -If the -.B sourcepath -option to the -.B shopt -builtin command is turned off, the -.SM -.B PATH -is not searched. -If any \fIarguments\fP are supplied, they become the positional -parameters when \fIfilename\fP is executed. Otherwise the positional -parameters are unchanged. -The return status is the status of the last command exited within -the script (0 if no commands are executed), and false if -.I filename -is not found or cannot be read. -.TP -\fBalias\fP [\fB\-p\fP] [\fIname\fP[=\fIvalue\fP] ...] -\fBAlias\fP with no arguments or with the -.B \-p -option prints the list of aliases in the form -\fBalias\fP \fIname\fP=\fIvalue\fP on standard output. -When arguments are supplied, an alias is defined for -each \fIname\fP whose \fIvalue\fP is given. -A trailing space in \fIvalue\fP causes the next word to be -checked for alias substitution when the alias is expanded. -For each \fIname\fP in the argument list for which no \fIvalue\fP -is supplied, the name and value of the alias is printed. -\fBAlias\fP returns true unless a \fIname\fP is given for which -no alias has been defined. -.TP -\fBbg\fP [\fIjobspec\fP ...] -Resume each suspended job \fIjobspec\fP in the background, as if it -had been started with -.BR & . -If -.I jobspec -is not present, the shell's notion of the \fIcurrent job\fP is used. -.B bg -.I jobspec -returns 0 unless run when job control is disabled or, when run with -job control enabled, any specified \fIjobspec\fP was not found -or was started without job control. -.TP -\fBbind\fP [\fB\-m\fP \fIkeymap\fP] [\fB\-lpsvPSVX\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBbind\fP [\fB\-m\fP \fIkeymap\fP] [\fB\-q\fP \fIfunction\fP] [\fB\-u\fP \fIfunction\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fIkeyseq\fP] -.TP -\fBbind\fP [\fB\-m\fP \fIkeymap\fP] \fB\-f\fP \fIfilename\fP -.TP -\fBbind\fP [\fB\-m\fP \fIkeymap\fP] \fB\-x\fP \fIkeyseq\fP:\fIshell\-command\fP -.TP -\fBbind\fP [\fB\-m\fP \fIkeymap\fP] \fIkeyseq\fP:\fIfunction\-name\fP -.TP -\fBbind\fP \fIreadline\-command\fP -.PD -Display current -.B readline -key and function bindings, bind a key sequence to a -.B readline -function or macro, or set a -.B readline -variable. -Each non-option argument is a command as it would appear in -.IR .inputrc , -but each binding or command must be passed as a separate argument; -e.g., '"\eC\-x\eC\-r": re\-read\-init\-file'. -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-m \fIkeymap\fP -Use -.I keymap -as the keymap to be affected by the subsequent bindings. -Acceptable -.I keymap -names are -\fIemacs, emacs\-standard, emacs\-meta, emacs\-ctlx, vi, -vi\-move, vi\-command\fP, and -.IR vi\-insert . -\fIvi\fP is equivalent to \fIvi\-command\fP; \fIemacs\fP is -equivalent to \fIemacs\-standard\fP. -.TP -.B \-l -List the names of all \fBreadline\fP functions. -.TP -.B \-p -Display \fBreadline\fP function names and bindings in such a way -that they can be re-read. -.TP -.B \-P -List current \fBreadline\fP function names and bindings. -.TP -.B \-s -Display \fBreadline\fP key sequences bound to macros and the strings -they output in such a way that they can be re-read. -.TP -.B \-S -Display \fBreadline\fP key sequences bound to macros and the strings -they output. -.TP -.B \-v -Display \fBreadline\fP variable names and values in such a way that they -can be re-read. -.TP -.B \-V -List current \fBreadline\fP variable names and values. -.TP -.B \-f \fIfilename\fP -Read key bindings from \fIfilename\fP. -.TP -.B \-q \fIfunction\fP -Query about which keys invoke the named \fIfunction\fP. -.TP -.B \-u \fIfunction\fP -Unbind all keys bound to the named \fIfunction\fP. -.TP -.B \-r \fIkeyseq\fP -Remove any current binding for \fIkeyseq\fP. -.TP -.B \-x \fIkeyseq\fP:\fIshell\-command\fP -Cause \fIshell\-command\fP to be executed whenever \fIkeyseq\fP is -entered. -When \fIshell\-command\fP is executed, the shell sets the -.SM -.B READLINE_LINE -variable to the contents of the \fBreadline\fP line buffer and the -.SM -.B READLINE_POINT -variable to the current location of the insertion point. -If the executed command changes the value of -.SM -.B READLINE_LINE -or -.SM -.BR READLINE_POINT , -those new values will be reflected in the editing state. -.TP -.B \-X -List all key sequences bound to shell commands and the associated commands -in a format that can be reused as input. -.PD -.PP -The return value is 0 unless an unrecognized option is given or an -error occurred. -.RE -.TP -\fBbreak\fP [\fIn\fP] -Exit from within a -.BR for , -.BR while , -.BR until , -or -.B select -loop. If \fIn\fP is specified, break \fIn\fP levels. -.I n -must be \(>= 1. If -.I n -is greater than the number of enclosing loops, all enclosing loops -are exited. -The return value is 0 unless \fIn\fP is not greater than or equal to 1. -.TP -\fBbuiltin\fP \fIshell\-builtin\fP [\fIarguments\fP] -Execute the specified shell builtin, passing it -.IR arguments , -and return its exit status. -This is useful when defining a -function whose name is the same as a shell builtin, -retaining the functionality of the builtin within the function. -The \fBcd\fP builtin is commonly redefined this way. -The return status is false if -.I shell\-builtin -is not a shell builtin command. -.TP -\fBcaller\fP [\fIexpr\fP] -Returns the context of any active subroutine call (a shell function or -a script executed with the \fB.\fP or \fBsource\fP builtins). -Without \fIexpr\fP, \fBcaller\fP displays the line number and source -filename of the current subroutine call. -If a non-negative integer is supplied as \fIexpr\fP, \fBcaller\fP -displays the line number, subroutine name, and source file corresponding -to that position in the current execution call stack. This extra -information may be used, for example, to print a stack trace. The -current frame is frame 0. -The return value is 0 unless the shell is not executing a subroutine -call or \fIexpr\fP does not correspond to a valid position in the -call stack. -.TP -\fBcd\fP [\fB\-L\fP|[\fB\-P\fP [\fB\-e\fP]]] [\fIdir\fP] -Change the current directory to \fIdir\fP. -if \fIdir\fP is not supplied, the value of the -.SM -.B HOME -shell variable is the default. -Any additional arguments following \fIdir\fP are ignored. -The variable -.SM -.B CDPATH -defines the search path for the directory containing -.IR dir : -each directory name in -.SM -.B CDPATH -is searched for \fIdir\fP. -Alternative directory names in -.SM -.B CDPATH -are separated by a colon (:). A null directory name in -.SM -.B CDPATH -is the same as the current directory, i.e., ``\fB.\fP''. If -.I dir -begins with a slash (/), -then -.SM -.B CDPATH -is not used. The -.B \-P -option causes \fBcd\fP to use the physical directory structure -by resolving symbolic links while traversing \fIdir\fP and -before processing instances of \fI..\fP in \fIdir\fP (see also the -.B \-P -option to the -.B set -builtin command); the -.B \-L -option forces symbolic links to be followed by resolving the link -after processing instances of \fI..\fP in \fIdir\fP. -If \fI..\fP appears in \fIdir\fP, it is processed by removing the -immediately previous pathname component from \fIdir\fP, back to a slash -or the beginning of \fIdir\fP. -If the -.B \-e -option is supplied with -.BR \-P , -and the current working directory cannot be successfully determined -after a successful directory change, \fBcd\fP will return an unsuccessful -status. -An argument of -.B \- -is converted to -.SM -.B $OLDPWD -before the directory change is attempted. -If a non-empty directory name from -.SM -.B CDPATH -is used, or if -\fB\-\fP is the first argument, and the directory change is -successful, the absolute pathname of the new working directory is -written to the standard output. -The return value is true if the directory was successfully changed; -false otherwise. -.TP -\fBcommand\fP [\fB\-pVv\fP] \fIcommand\fP [\fIarg\fP ...] -Run -.I command -with -.I args -suppressing the normal shell function lookup. Only builtin -commands or commands found in the -.SM -.B PATH -are executed. If the -.B \-p -option is given, the search for -.I command -is performed using a default value for -.SM -.B PATH -that is guaranteed to find all of the standard utilities. -If either the -.B \-V -or -.B \-v -option is supplied, a description of -.I command -is printed. The -.B \-v -option causes a single word indicating the command or filename -used to invoke -.I command -to be displayed; the -.B \-V -option produces a more verbose description. -If the -.B \-V -or -.B \-v -option is supplied, the exit status is 0 if -.I command -was found, and 1 if not. If neither option is supplied and -an error occurred or -.I command -cannot be found, the exit status is 127. Otherwise, the exit status of the -.B command -builtin is the exit status of -.IR command . -.TP -\fBcompgen\fP [\fIoption\fP] [\fIword\fP] -Generate possible completion matches for \fIword\fP according to -the \fIoption\fPs, which may be any option accepted by the -.B complete -builtin with the exception of \fB\-p\fP and \fB\-r\fP, and write -the matches to the standard output. -When using the \fB\-F\fP or \fB\-C\fP options, the various shell variables -set by the programmable completion facilities, while available, will not -have useful values. -.sp 1 -The matches will be generated in the same way as if the programmable -completion code had generated them directly from a completion specification -with the same flags. -If \fIword\fP is specified, only those completions matching \fIword\fP -will be displayed. -.sp 1 -The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied, or no -matches were generated. -.TP -\fBcomplete\fP [\fB\-abcdefgjksuv\fP] [\fB\-o\fP \fIcomp-option\fP] [\fB\-DE\fP] [\fB\-A\fP \fIaction\fP] [\fB\-G\fP \fIglobpat\fP] [\fB\-W\fP \fIwordlist\fP] [\fB\-F\fP \fIfunction\fP] [\fB\-C\fP \fIcommand\fP] -.br -[\fB\-X\fP \fIfilterpat\fP] [\fB\-P\fP \fIprefix\fP] [\fB\-S\fP \fIsuffix\fP] \fIname\fP [\fIname ...\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBcomplete\fP \fB\-pr\fP [\fB\-DE\fP] [\fIname\fP ...] -.PD -Specify how arguments to each \fIname\fP should be completed. -If the \fB\-p\fP option is supplied, or if no options are supplied, -existing completion specifications are printed in a way that allows -them to be reused as input. -The \fB\-r\fP option removes a completion specification for -each \fIname\fP, or, if no \fIname\fPs are supplied, all -completion specifications. -The \fB\-D\fP option indicates that the remaining options and actions should -apply to the ``default'' command completion; that is, completion attempted -on a command for which no completion has previously been defined. -The \fB\-E\fP option indicates that the remaining options and actions should -apply to ``empty'' command completion; that is, completion attempted on a -blank line. -.sp 1 -The process of applying these completion specifications when word completion -is attempted is described above under \fBProgrammable Completion\fP. -.sp 1 -Other options, if specified, have the following meanings. -The arguments to the \fB\-G\fP, \fB\-W\fP, and \fB\-X\fP options -(and, if necessary, the \fB\-P\fP and \fB\-S\fP options) -should be quoted to protect them from expansion before the -.B complete -builtin is invoked. -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP 8 -\fB\-o\fP \fIcomp-option\fP -The \fIcomp-option\fP controls several aspects of the compspec's behavior -beyond the simple generation of completions. -\fIcomp-option\fP may be one of: -.RS -.TP 8 -.B bashdefault -Perform the rest of the default \fBbash\fP completions if the compspec -generates no matches. -.TP 8 -.B default -Use readline's default filename completion if the compspec generates -no matches. -.TP 8 -.B dirnames -Perform directory name completion if the compspec generates no matches. -.TP 8 -.B filenames -Tell readline that the compspec generates filenames, so it can perform any -filename\-specific processing (like adding a slash to directory names, -quoting special characters, or suppressing trailing spaces). -Intended to be used with shell functions. -.TP 8 -.B noquote -Tell readline not to quote the completed words if they are filenames -(quoting filenames is the default). -.TP 8 -.B nospace -Tell readline not to append a space (the default) to words completed at -the end of the line. -.TP 8 -.B plusdirs -After any matches defined by the compspec are generated, -directory name completion is attempted and any -matches are added to the results of the other actions. -.RE -.TP 8 -\fB\-A\fP \fIaction\fP -The \fIaction\fP may be one of the following to generate a list of possible -completions: -.RS -.TP 8 -.B alias -Alias names. May also be specified as \fB\-a\fP. -.TP 8 -.B arrayvar -Array variable names. -.TP 8 -.B binding -\fBReadline\fP key binding names. -.TP 8 -.B builtin -Names of shell builtin commands. May also be specified as \fB\-b\fP. -.TP 8 -.B command -Command names. May also be specified as \fB\-c\fP. -.TP 8 -.B directory -Directory names. May also be specified as \fB\-d\fP. -.TP 8 -.B disabled -Names of disabled shell builtins. -.TP 8 -.B enabled -Names of enabled shell builtins. -.TP 8 -.B export -Names of exported shell variables. May also be specified as \fB\-e\fP. -.TP 8 -.B file -File names. May also be specified as \fB\-f\fP. -.TP 8 -.B function -Names of shell functions. -.TP 8 -.B group -Group names. May also be specified as \fB\-g\fP. -.TP 8 -.B helptopic -Help topics as accepted by the \fBhelp\fP builtin. -.TP 8 -.B hostname -Hostnames, as taken from the file specified by the -.SM -.B HOSTFILE -shell variable. -.TP 8 -.B job -Job names, if job control is active. May also be specified as \fB\-j\fP. -.TP 8 -.B keyword -Shell reserved words. May also be specified as \fB\-k\fP. -.TP 8 -.B running -Names of running jobs, if job control is active. -.TP 8 -.B service -Service names. May also be specified as \fB\-s\fP. -.TP 8 -.B setopt -Valid arguments for the \fB\-o\fP option to the \fBset\fP builtin. -.TP 8 -.B shopt -Shell option names as accepted by the \fBshopt\fP builtin. -.TP 8 -.B signal -Signal names. -.TP 8 -.B stopped -Names of stopped jobs, if job control is active. -.TP 8 -.B user -User names. May also be specified as \fB\-u\fP. -.TP 8 -.B variable -Names of all shell variables. May also be specified as \fB\-v\fP. -.RE -.TP 8 -\fB\-C\fP \fIcommand\fP -\fIcommand\fP is executed in a subshell environment, and its output is -used as the possible completions. -.TP 8 -\fB\-F\fP \fIfunction\fP -The shell function \fIfunction\fP is executed in the current shell -environment. -When the function is executed, -the first argument (\fB$1\fP) is the name of the command whose arguments are -being completed, -the second argument (\fB$2\fP) is the word being completed, -and the third argument (\fB$3\fP) is the word preceding the word being -completed on the current command line. -When it finishes, the possible completions are retrieved from the value -of the -.SM -.B COMPREPLY -array variable. -.TP 8 -\fB\-G\fP \fIglobpat\fP -The pathname expansion pattern \fIglobpat\fP is expanded to generate -the possible completions. -.TP 8 -\fB\-P\fP \fIprefix\fP -\fIprefix\fP is added at the beginning of each possible completion -after all other options have been applied. -.TP 8 -\fB\-S\fP \fIsuffix\fP -\fIsuffix\fP is appended to each possible completion -after all other options have been applied. -.TP 8 -\fB\-W\fP \fIwordlist\fP -The \fIwordlist\fP is split using the characters in the -.SM -.B IFS -special variable as delimiters, and each resultant word is expanded. -The possible completions are the members of the resultant list which -match the word being completed. -.TP 8 -\fB\-X\fP \fIfilterpat\fP -\fIfilterpat\fP is a pattern as used for pathname expansion. -It is applied to the list of possible completions generated by the -preceding options and arguments, and each completion matching -\fIfilterpat\fP is removed from the list. -A leading \fB!\fP in \fIfilterpat\fP negates the pattern; in this -case, any completion not matching \fIfilterpat\fP is removed. -.PD -.PP -The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied, an option -other than \fB\-p\fP or \fB\-r\fP is supplied without a \fIname\fP -argument, an attempt is made to remove a completion specification for -a \fIname\fP for which no specification exists, or -an error occurs adding a completion specification. -.RE -.TP -\fBcompopt\fP [\fB\-o\fP \fIoption\fP] [\fB\-DE\fP] [\fB+o\fP \fIoption\fP] [\fIname\fP] -Modify completion options for each \fIname\fP according to the -\fIoption\fPs, or for the -currently-executing completion if no \fIname\fPs are supplied. -If no \fIoption\fPs are given, display the completion options for each -\fIname\fP or the current completion. -The possible values of \fIoption\fP are those valid for the \fBcomplete\fP -builtin described above. -The \fB\-D\fP option indicates that the remaining options should -apply to the ``default'' command completion; that is, completion attempted -on a command for which no completion has previously been defined. -The \fB\-E\fP option indicates that the remaining options should -apply to ``empty'' command completion; that is, completion attempted on a -blank line. -.sp 1 -The return value is true unless an invalid option is supplied, an attempt -is made to modify the options for a \fIname\fP for which no completion -specification exists, or an output error occurs. -.TP -\fBcontinue\fP [\fIn\fP] -Resume the next iteration of the enclosing -.BR for , -.BR while , -.BR until , -or -.B select -loop. -If -.I n -is specified, resume at the \fIn\fPth enclosing loop. -.I n -must be \(>= 1. If -.I n -is greater than the number of enclosing loops, the last enclosing loop -(the ``top-level'' loop) is resumed. -The return value is 0 unless \fIn\fP is not greater than or equal to 1. -.TP -\fBdeclare\fP [\fB\-aAfFgilnrtux\fP] [\fB\-p\fP] [\fIname\fP[=\fIvalue\fP] ...] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBtypeset\fP [\fB\-aAfFgilnrtux\fP] [\fB\-p\fP] [\fIname\fP[=\fIvalue\fP] ...] -.PD -Declare variables and/or give them attributes. -If no \fIname\fPs are given then display the values of variables. -The -.B \-p -option will display the attributes and values of each -.IR name . -When -.B \-p -is used with \fIname\fP arguments, additional options, -other than \fB\-f\fP and \fB\-F\fP, are ignored. -When -.B \-p -is supplied without \fIname\fP arguments, it will display the attributes -and values of all variables having the attributes specified by the -additional options. -If no other options are supplied with \fB\-p\fP, \fBdeclare\fP will display -the attributes and values of all shell variables. The \fB\-f\fP option -will restrict the display to shell functions. -The -.B \-F -option inhibits the display of function definitions; only the -function name and attributes are printed. -If the \fBextdebug\fP shell option is enabled using \fBshopt\fP, -the source file name and line number where the function is defined -are displayed as well. The -.B \-F -option implies -.BR \-f . -The -.B \-g -option forces variables to be created or modified at the global scope, -even when \fBdeclare\fP is executed in a shell function. -It is ignored in all other cases. -The following options can -be used to restrict output to variables with the specified attribute or -to give variables attributes: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-a -Each \fIname\fP is an indexed array variable (see -.B Arrays -above). -.TP -.B \-A -Each \fIname\fP is an associative array variable (see -.B Arrays -above). -.TP -.B \-f -Use function names only. -.TP -.B \-i -The variable is treated as an integer; arithmetic evaluation (see -.SM -.B "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" -above) is performed when the variable is assigned a value. -.TP -.B \-l -When the variable is assigned a value, all upper-case characters are -converted to lower-case. -The upper-case attribute is disabled. -.TP -.B \-n -Give each \fIname\fP the \fInameref\fP attribute, making -it a name reference to another variable. -That other variable is defined by the value of \fIname\fP. -All references and assignments to \fIname\fP, except for changing the -\fB\-n\fP attribute itself, are performed on the variable referenced by -\fIname\fP's value. -The \fB\-n\fP attribute cannot be applied to array variables. -.TP -.B \-r -Make \fIname\fPs readonly. These names cannot then be assigned values -by subsequent assignment statements or unset. -.TP -.B \-t -Give each \fIname\fP the \fItrace\fP attribute. -Traced functions inherit the \fBDEBUG\fP and \fBRETURN\fP traps from -the calling shell. -The trace attribute has no special meaning for variables. -.TP -.B \-u -When the variable is assigned a value, all lower-case characters are -converted to upper-case. -The lower-case attribute is disabled. -.TP -.B \-x -Mark \fIname\fPs for export to subsequent commands via the environment. -.PD -.PP -Using `+' instead of `\-' -turns off the attribute instead, -with the exceptions that \fB+a\fP -may not be used to destroy an array variable and \fB+r\fP will not -remove the readonly attribute. -When used in a function, -.B declare -and -.B typeset -make each -\fIname\fP local, as with the -.B local -command, -unless the \fB\-g\fP option is supplied. -If a variable name is followed by =\fIvalue\fP, the value of -the variable is set to \fIvalue\fP. -The return value is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered, -an attempt is made to define a function using -.if n ``\-f foo=bar'', -.if t \f(CW\-f foo=bar\fP, -an attempt is made to assign a value to a readonly variable, -an attempt is made to assign a value to an array variable without -using the compound assignment syntax (see -.B Arrays -above), one of the \fInames\fP is not a valid shell variable name, -an attempt is made to turn off readonly status for a readonly variable, -an attempt is made to turn off array status for an array variable, -or an attempt is made to display a non-existent function with \fB\-f\fP. -.RE -.TP -.B dirs [\fB\-clpv\fP] [+\fIn\fP] [\-\fIn\fP] -Without options, displays the list of currently remembered directories. -The default display is on a single line with directory names separated -by spaces. -Directories are added to the list with the -.B pushd -command; the -.B popd -command removes entries from the list. -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-c -Clears the directory stack by deleting all of the entries. -.TP -.B \-l -Produces a listing using full pathnames; -the default listing format uses a tilde to denote the home directory. -.TP -.B \-p -Print the directory stack with one entry per line. -.TP -.B \-v -Print the directory stack with one entry per line, -prefixing each entry with its index in the stack. -.TP -\fB+\fP\fIn\fP -Displays the \fIn\fPth entry counting from the left of the list -shown by -.B dirs -when invoked without options, starting with zero. -.TP -\fB\-\fP\fIn\fP -Displays the \fIn\fPth entry counting from the right of the list -shown by -.B dirs -when invoked without options, starting with zero. -.PD -.PP -The return value is 0 unless an -invalid option is supplied or \fIn\fP indexes beyond the end -of the directory stack. -.RE -.TP -\fBdisown\fP [\fB\-ar\fP] [\fB\-h\fP] [\fIjobspec\fP ...] -Without options, remove each -.I jobspec -from the table of active jobs. -If -.I jobspec -is not present, and neither the \fB\-a\fP nor the \fB\-r\fP option -is supplied, the \fIcurrent job\fP is used. -If the \fB\-h\fP option is given, each -.I jobspec -is not removed from the table, but is marked so that -.SM -.B SIGHUP -is not sent to the job if the shell receives a -.SM -.BR SIGHUP . -If no -.I jobspec -is supplied, the -.B \-a -option means to remove or mark all jobs; the -.B \-r -option without a -.I jobspec -argument restricts operation to running jobs. -The return value is 0 unless a -.I jobspec -does not specify a valid job. -.TP -\fBecho\fP [\fB\-neE\fP] [\fIarg\fP ...] -Output the \fIarg\fPs, separated by spaces, followed by a newline. -The return status is 0 unless a write error occurs. -If \fB\-n\fP is specified, the trailing newline is -suppressed. If the \fB\-e\fP option is given, interpretation of -the following backslash-escaped characters is enabled. The -.B \-E -option disables the interpretation of these escape characters, -even on systems where they are interpreted by default. -The \fBxpg_echo\fP shell option may be used to -dynamically determine whether or not \fBecho\fP expands these -escape characters by default. -.B echo -does not interpret \fB\-\-\fP to mean the end of options. -.B echo -interprets the following escape sequences: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \ea -alert (bell) -.TP -.B \eb -backspace -.TP -.B \ec -suppress further output -.TP -.B \ee -.TP -.B \eE -an escape character -.TP -.B \ef -form feed -.TP -.B \en -new line -.TP -.B \er -carriage return -.TP -.B \et -horizontal tab -.TP -.B \ev -vertical tab -.TP -.B \e\e -backslash -.TP -.B \e0\fInnn\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the octal value \fInnn\fP -(zero to three octal digits) -.TP -.B \ex\fIHH\fP -the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal value \fIHH\fP -(one or two hex digits) -.TP -.B \eu\fIHHHH\fP -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -\fIHHHH\fP (one to four hex digits) -.TP -.B \eU\fIHHHHHHHH\fP -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -\fIHHHHHHHH\fP (one to eight hex digits) -.PD -.RE -.TP -\fBenable\fP [\fB\-a\fP] [\fB\-dnps\fP] [\fB\-f\fP \fIfilename\fP] [\fIname\fP ...] -Enable and disable builtin shell commands. -Disabling a builtin allows a disk command which has the same name -as a shell builtin to be executed without specifying a full pathname, -even though the shell normally searches for builtins before disk commands. -If \fB\-n\fP is used, each \fIname\fP -is disabled; otherwise, -\fInames\fP are enabled. For example, to use the -.B test -binary found via the -.SM -.B PATH -instead of the shell builtin version, run -.if t \f(CWenable -n test\fP. -.if n ``enable -n test''. -The -.B \-f -option means to load the new builtin command -.I name -from shared object -.IR filename , -on systems that support dynamic loading. The -.B \-d -option will delete a builtin previously loaded with -.BR \-f . -If no \fIname\fP arguments are given, or if the -.B \-p -option is supplied, a list of shell builtins is printed. -With no other option arguments, the list consists of all enabled -shell builtins. -If \fB\-n\fP is supplied, only disabled builtins are printed. -If \fB\-a\fP is supplied, the list printed includes all builtins, with an -indication of whether or not each is enabled. -If \fB\-s\fP is supplied, the output is restricted to the POSIX -\fIspecial\fP builtins. -The return value is 0 unless a -.I name -is not a shell builtin or there is an error loading a new builtin -from a shared object. -.TP -\fBeval\fP [\fIarg\fP ...] -The \fIarg\fPs are read and concatenated together into a single -command. This command is then read and executed by the shell, and -its exit status is returned as the value of -.BR eval . -If there are no -.IR args , -or only null arguments, -.B eval -returns 0. -.TP -\fBexec\fP [\fB\-cl\fP] [\fB\-a\fP \fIname\fP] [\fIcommand\fP [\fIarguments\fP]] -If -.I command -is specified, it replaces the shell. -No new process is created. The -.I arguments -become the arguments to \fIcommand\fP. -If the -.B \-l -option is supplied, -the shell places a dash at the beginning of the zeroth argument passed to -.IR command . -This is what -.IR login (1) -does. The -.B \-c -option causes -.I command -to be executed with an empty environment. If -.B \-a -is supplied, the shell passes -.I name -as the zeroth argument to the executed command. -If -.I command -cannot be executed for some reason, a non-interactive shell exits, -unless the -.B execfail -shell option -is enabled. In that case, it returns failure. -An interactive shell returns failure if the file cannot be executed. -If -.I command -is not specified, any redirections take effect in the current shell, -and the return status is 0. If there is a redirection error, the -return status is 1. -.TP -\fBexit\fP [\fIn\fP] -Cause the shell to exit -with a status of \fIn\fP. If -.I n -is omitted, the exit status -is that of the last command executed. -A trap on -.SM -.B EXIT -is executed before the shell terminates. -.TP -\fBexport\fP [\fB\-fn\fP\^] [\fIname\fP[=\fIword\fP]] ... -.PD 0 -.TP -.B export \-p -.PD -The supplied -.I names -are marked for automatic export to the environment of -subsequently executed commands. If the -.B \-f -option is given, -the -.I names -refer to functions. -If no -.I names -are given, or if the -.B \-p -option is supplied, a list -of names of all exported variables is printed. -The -.B \-n -option causes the export property to be removed from each -\fIname\fP. -If a variable name is followed by =\fIword\fP, the value of -the variable is set to \fIword\fP. -.B export -returns an exit status of 0 unless an invalid option is -encountered, -one of the \fInames\fP is not a valid shell variable name, or -.B \-f -is supplied with a -.I name -that is not a function. -.TP -\fBfc\fP [\fB\-e\fP \fIename\fP] [\fB\-lnr\fP] [\fIfirst\fP] [\fIlast\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBfc\fP \fB\-s\fP [\fIpat\fP=\fIrep\fP] [\fIcmd\fP] -.PD -The first form selects a range of commands from -.I first -to -.I last -from the history list and displays or edits and re-executes them. -.I First -and -.I last -may be specified as a string (to locate the last command beginning -with that string) or as a number (an index into the history list, -where a negative number is used as an offset from the current -command number). If -.I last -is not specified it is set to -the current command for listing (so that -.if n ``fc \-l \-10'' -.if t \f(CWfc \-l \-10\fP -prints the last 10 commands) and to -.I first -otherwise. -If -.I first -is not specified it is set to the previous -command for editing and \-16 for listing. -.sp 1 -The -.B \-n -option suppresses -the command numbers when listing. The -.B \-r -option reverses the order of -the commands. If the -.B \-l -option is given, -the commands are listed on -standard output. Otherwise, the editor given by -.I ename -is invoked -on a file containing those commands. If -.I ename -is not given, the -value of the -.SM -.B FCEDIT -variable is used, and -the value of -.SM -.B EDITOR -if -.SM -.B FCEDIT -is not set. If neither variable is set, -.FN vi -is used. When editing is complete, the edited commands are -echoed and executed. -.sp 1 -In the second form, \fIcommand\fP is re-executed after each instance -of \fIpat\fP is replaced by \fIrep\fP. -\fICommand\fP is intepreted the same as \fIfirst\fP above. -A useful alias to use with this is -.if n ``r="fc -s"'', -.if t \f(CWr='fc \-s'\fP, -so that typing -.if n ``r cc'' -.if t \f(CWr cc\fP -runs the last command beginning with -.if n ``cc'' -.if t \f(CWcc\fP -and typing -.if n ``r'' -.if t \f(CWr\fP -re-executes the last command. -.sp 1 -If the first form is used, the return value is 0 unless an invalid -option is encountered or -.I first -or -.I last -specify history lines out of range. -If the -.B \-e -option is supplied, the return value is the value of the last -command executed or failure if an error occurs with the temporary -file of commands. If the second form is used, the return status -is that of the command re-executed, unless -.I cmd -does not specify a valid history line, in which case -.B fc -returns failure. -.TP -\fBfg\fP [\fIjobspec\fP] -Resume -.I jobspec -in the foreground, and make it the current job. -If -.I jobspec -is not present, the shell's notion of the \fIcurrent job\fP is used. -The return value is that of the command placed into the foreground, -or failure if run when job control is disabled or, when run with -job control enabled, if -.I jobspec -does not specify a valid job or -.I jobspec -specifies a job that was started without job control. -.TP -\fBgetopts\fP \fIoptstring\fP \fIname\fP [\fIargs\fP] -.B getopts -is used by shell procedures to parse positional parameters. -.I optstring -contains the option characters to be recognized; if a character -is followed by a colon, the option is expected to have an -argument, which should be separated from it by white space. -The colon and question mark characters may not be used as -option characters. -Each time it is invoked, -.B getopts -places the next option in the shell variable -.IR name , -initializing -.I name -if it does not exist, -and the index of the next argument to be processed into the -variable -.SM -.BR OPTIND . -.SM -.B OPTIND -is initialized to 1 each time the shell or a shell script -is invoked. When an option requires an argument, -.B getopts -places that argument into the variable -.SM -.BR OPTARG . -The shell does not reset -.SM -.B OPTIND -automatically; it must be manually reset between multiple -calls to -.B getopts -within the same shell invocation if a new set of parameters -is to be used. -.sp 1 -When the end of options is encountered, \fBgetopts\fP exits with a -return value greater than zero. -.SM -.B OPTIND -is set to the index of the first non-option argument, -and \fIname\fP is set to ?. -.sp 1 -.B getopts -normally parses the positional parameters, but if more arguments are -given in -.IR args , -.B getopts -parses those instead. -.sp 1 -.B getopts -can report errors in two ways. If the first character of -.I optstring -is a colon, -.I silent -error reporting is used. In normal operation, diagnostic messages -are printed when invalid options or missing option arguments are -encountered. -If the variable -.SM -.B OPTERR -is set to 0, no error messages will be displayed, even if the first -character of -.I optstring -is not a colon. -.sp 1 -If an invalid option is seen, -.B getopts -places ? into -.I name -and, if not silent, -prints an error message and unsets -.SM -.BR OPTARG . -If -.B getopts -is silent, -the option character found is placed in -.SM -.B OPTARG -and no diagnostic message is printed. -.sp 1 -If a required argument is not found, and -.B getopts -is not silent, -a question mark (\^\fB?\fP\^) is placed in -.IR name , -.SM -.B OPTARG -is unset, and a diagnostic message is printed. -If -.B getopts -is silent, then a colon (\^\fB:\fP\^) is placed in -.I name -and -.SM -.B OPTARG -is set to the option character found. -.sp 1 -.B getopts -returns true if an option, specified or unspecified, is found. -It returns false if the end of options is encountered or an -error occurs. -.TP -\fBhash\fP [\fB\-lr\fP] [\fB\-p\fP \fIfilename\fP] [\fB\-dt\fP] [\fIname\fP] -Each time \fBhash\fP is invoked, -the full pathname of the command -.I name -is determined by searching -the directories in -.B $PATH -and remembered. Any previously-remembered pathname is discarded. -If the -.B \-p -option is supplied, no path search is performed, and -.I filename -is used as the full filename of the command. -The -.B \-r -option causes the shell to forget all -remembered locations. -The -.B \-d -option causes the shell to forget the remembered location of each \fIname\fP. -If the -.B \-t -option is supplied, the full pathname to which each \fIname\fP corresponds -is printed. If multiple \fIname\fP arguments are supplied with \fB\-t\fP, -the \fIname\fP is printed before the hashed full pathname. -The -.B \-l -option causes output to be displayed in a format that may be reused as input. -If no arguments are given, or if only \fB\-l\fP is supplied, -information about remembered commands is printed. -The return status is true unless a -.I name -is not found or an invalid option is supplied. -.TP -\fBhelp\fP [\fB\-dms\fP] [\fIpattern\fP] -Display helpful information about builtin commands. If -.I pattern -is specified, -.B help -gives detailed help on all commands matching -.IR pattern ; -otherwise help for all the builtins and shell control structures -is printed. -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-d -Display a short description of each \fIpattern\fP -.TP -.B \-m -Display the description of each \fIpattern\fP in a manpage-like format -.TP -.B \-s -Display only a short usage synopsis for each \fIpattern\fP -.PD -.PP -The return status is 0 unless no command matches -.IR pattern . -.RE -.TP -\fBhistory [\fIn\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBhistory\fP \fB\-c\fP -.TP -\fBhistory \-d\fP \fIoffset\fP -.TP -\fBhistory\fP \fB\-anrw\fP [\fIfilename\fP] -.TP -\fBhistory\fP \fB\-p\fP \fIarg\fP [\fIarg ...\fP] -.TP -\fBhistory\fP \fB\-s\fP \fIarg\fP [\fIarg ...\fP] -.PD -With no options, display the command -history list with line numbers. Lines listed -with a -.B * -have been modified. An argument of -.I n -lists only the last -.I n -lines. -If the shell variable -.SM -.B HISTTIMEFORMAT -is set and not null, -it is used as a format string for \fIstrftime\fP(3) to display -the time stamp associated with each displayed history entry. -No intervening blank is printed between the formatted time stamp -and the history line. -If \fIfilename\fP is supplied, it is used as the -name of the history file; if not, the value of -.SM -.B HISTFILE -is used. Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-c -Clear the history list by deleting all the entries. -.TP -\fB\-d\fP \fIoffset\fP -Delete the history entry at position \fIoffset\fP. -.TP -.B \-a -Append the ``new'' history lines (history lines entered since the -beginning of the current \fBbash\fP session) to the history file. -.TP -.B \-n -Read the history lines not already read from the history -file into the current history list. These are lines -appended to the history file since the beginning of the -current \fBbash\fP session. -.TP -.B \-r -Read the contents of the history file -and append them to the current history list. -.TP -.B \-w -Write the current history list to the history file, overwriting the -history file's contents. -.TP -.B \-p -Perform history substitution on the following \fIargs\fP and display -the result on the standard output. -Does not store the results in the history list. -Each \fIarg\fP must be quoted to disable normal history expansion. -.TP -.B \-s -Store the -.I args -in the history list as a single entry. The last command in the -history list is removed before the -.I args -are added. -.PD -.PP -If the -.SM -.B HISTTIMEFORMAT -variable is set, the time stamp information -associated with each history entry is written to the history file, -marked with the history comment character. -When the history file is read, lines beginning with the history -comment character followed immediately by a digit are interpreted -as timestamps for the previous history line. -The return value is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered, an -error occurs while reading or writing the history file, an invalid -\fIoffset\fP is supplied as an argument to \fB\-d\fP, or the -history expansion supplied as an argument to \fB\-p\fP fails. -.RE -.TP -\fBjobs\fP [\fB\-lnprs\fP] [ \fIjobspec\fP ... ] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBjobs\fP \fB\-x\fP \fIcommand\fP [ \fIargs\fP ... ] -.PD -The first form lists the active jobs. The options have the following -meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-l -List process IDs -in addition to the normal information. -.TP -.B \-n -Display information only about jobs that have changed status since -the user was last notified of their status. -.TP -.B \-p -List only the process ID of the job's process group -leader. -.TP -.B \-r -Display only running jobs. -.TP -.B \-s -Display only stopped jobs. -.PD -.PP -If -.I jobspec -is given, output is restricted to information about that job. -The return status is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered -or an invalid -.I jobspec -is supplied. -.PP -If the -.B \-x -option is supplied, -.B jobs -replaces any -.I jobspec -found in -.I command -or -.I args -with the corresponding process group ID, and executes -.I command -passing it -.IR args , -returning its exit status. -.RE -.TP -\fBkill\fP [\fB\-s\fP \fIsigspec\fP | \fB\-n\fP \fIsignum\fP | \fB\-\fP\fIsigspec\fP] [\fIpid\fP | \fIjobspec\fP] ... -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBkill\fP \fB\-l\fP [\fIsigspec\fP | \fIexit_status\fP] -.PD -Send the signal named by -.I sigspec -or -.I signum -to the processes named by -.I pid -or -.IR jobspec . -.I sigspec -is either a case-insensitive signal name such as -.SM -.B SIGKILL -(with or without the -.SM -.B SIG -prefix) or a signal number; -.I signum -is a signal number. -If -.I sigspec -is not present, then -.SM -.B SIGTERM -is assumed. -An argument of -.B \-l -lists the signal names. -If any arguments are supplied when -.B \-l -is given, the names of the signals corresponding to the arguments are -listed, and the return status is 0. -The \fIexit_status\fP argument to -.B \-l -is a number specifying either a signal number or the exit status of -a process terminated by a signal. -.B kill -returns true if at least one signal was successfully sent, or false -if an error occurs or an invalid option is encountered. -.TP -\fBlet\fP \fIarg\fP [\fIarg\fP ...] -Each -.I arg -is an arithmetic expression to be evaluated (see -.SM -.B "ARITHMETIC EVALUATION" -above). -If the last -.I arg -evaluates to 0, -.B let -returns 1; 0 is returned otherwise. -.TP -\fBlocal\fP [\fIoption\fP] [\fIname\fP[=\fIvalue\fP] ...] -For each argument, a local variable named -.I name -is created, and assigned -.IR value . -The \fIoption\fP can be any of the options accepted by \fBdeclare\fP. -When -.B local -is used within a function, it causes the variable -.I name -to have a visible scope restricted to that function and its children. -With no operands, -.B local -writes a list of local variables to the standard output. It is -an error to use -.B local -when not within a function. The return status is 0 unless -.B local -is used outside a function, an invalid -.I name -is supplied, or -\fIname\fP is a readonly variable. -.TP -.B logout -Exit a login shell. -.TP -\fBmapfile\fP [\fB\-n\fP \fIcount\fP] [\fB\-O\fP \fIorigin\fP] [\fB\-s\fP \fIcount\fP] [\fB\-t\fP] [\fB\-u\fP \fIfd\fP] [\fB\-C\fP \fIcallback\fP] [\fB\-c\fP \fIquantum\fP] [\fIarray\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBreadarray\fP [\fB\-n\fP \fIcount\fP] [\fB\-O\fP \fIorigin\fP] [\fB\-s\fP \fIcount\fP] [\fB\-t\fP] [\fB\-u\fP \fIfd\fP] [\fB\-C\fP \fIcallback\fP] [\fB\-c\fP \fIquantum\fP] [\fIarray\fP] -.PD -Read lines from the standard input into the indexed array variable -.IR array , -or from file descriptor -.IR fd -if the -.B \-u -option is supplied. -The variable -.SM -.B MAPFILE -is the default \fIarray\fP. -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-n -Copy at most -.I count -lines. If \fIcount\fP is 0, all lines are copied. -.TP -.B \-O -Begin assigning to -.I array -at index -.IR origin . -The default index is 0. -.TP -.B \-s -Discard the first \fIcount\fP lines read. -.TP -.B \-t -Remove a trailing newline from each line read. -.TP -.B \-u -Read lines from file descriptor \fIfd\fP instead of the standard input. -.TP -.B \-C -Evaluate -.I callback -each time \fIquantum\fP lines are read. The \fB\-c\fP option specifies -.IR quantum . -.TP -.B \-c -Specify the number of lines read between each call to -.IR callback . -.PD -.PP -If -.B \-C -is specified without -.BR \-c , -the default quantum is 5000. -When \fIcallback\fP is evaluated, it is supplied the index of the next -array element to be assigned and the line to be assigned to that element -as additional arguments. -\fIcallback\fP is evaluated after the line is read but before the -array element is assigned. -.PP -If not supplied with an explicit origin, \fBmapfile\fP will clear \fIarray\fP -before assigning to it. -.PP -\fBmapfile\fP returns successfully unless an invalid option or option -argument is supplied, \fIarray\fP is invalid or unassignable, or if -\fIarray\fP is not an indexed array. -.RE -.TP -\fBpopd\fP [\-\fBn\fP] [+\fIn\fP] [\-\fIn\fP] -Removes entries from the directory stack. With no arguments, -removes the top directory from the stack, and performs a -.B cd -to the new top directory. -Arguments, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-n -Suppresses the normal change of directory when removing directories -from the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. -.TP -\fB+\fP\fIn\fP -Removes the \fIn\fPth entry counting from the left of the list -shown by -.BR dirs , -starting with zero. For example: -.if n ``popd +0'' -.if t \f(CWpopd +0\fP -removes the first directory, -.if n ``popd +1'' -.if t \f(CWpopd +1\fP -the second. -.TP -\fB\-\fP\fIn\fP -Removes the \fIn\fPth entry counting from the right of the list -shown by -.BR dirs , -starting with zero. For example: -.if n ``popd -0'' -.if t \f(CWpopd -0\fP -removes the last directory, -.if n ``popd -1'' -.if t \f(CWpopd -1\fP -the next to last. -.PD -.PP -If the -.B popd -command is successful, a -.B dirs -is performed as well, and the return status is 0. -.B popd -returns false if an invalid option is encountered, the directory stack -is empty, a non-existent directory stack entry is specified, or the -directory change fails. -.RE -.TP -\fBprintf\fP [\fB\-v\fP \fIvar\fP] \fIformat\fP [\fIarguments\fP] -Write the formatted \fIarguments\fP to the standard output under the -control of the \fIformat\fP. -The \fB\-v\fP option causes the output to be assigned to the variable -\fIvar\fP rather than being printed to the standard output. -.sp 1 -The \fIformat\fP is a character string which contains three types of objects: -plain characters, which are simply copied to standard output, character -escape sequences, which are converted and copied to the standard output, and -format specifications, each of which causes printing of the next successive -\fIargument\fP. -In addition to the standard \fIprintf\fP(1) format specifications, -\fBprintf\fP interprets the following extensions: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B %b -causes -\fBprintf\fP to expand backslash escape sequences in the corresponding -\fIargument\fP (except that \fB\ec\fP terminates output, backslashes in -\fB\e\(aq\fP, \fB\e"\fP, and \fB\e?\fP are not removed, and octal escapes -beginning with \fB\e0\fP may contain up to four digits). -.TP -.B %q -causes \fBprintf\fP to output the corresponding -\fIargument\fP in a format that can be reused as shell input. -.TP -.B %(\fIdatefmt\fP)T -causes \fBprintf\fP to output the date-time string resulting from using -\fIdatefmt\fP as a format string for \fIstrftime\fP(3). -The corresponding \fIargument\fP is an integer representing the number of -seconds since the epoch. -Two special argument values may be used: -1 represents the current -time, and -2 represents the time the shell was invoked. -If no argument is specified, conversion behaves as if -1 had been given. -This is an exception to the usual \fBprintf\fP behavior. -.PD -.PP -Arguments to non-string format specifiers are treated as C constants, -except that a leading plus or minus sign is allowed, and if the leading -character is a single or double quote, the value is the ASCII value of -the following character. -.PP -The \fIformat\fP is reused as necessary to consume all of the \fIarguments\fP. -If the \fIformat\fP requires more \fIarguments\fP than are supplied, the -extra format specifications behave as if a zero value or null string, as -appropriate, had been supplied. -The return value is zero on success, non-zero on failure. -.RE -.TP -\fBpushd\fP [\fB\-n\fP] [+\fIn\fP] [\-\fIn\fP] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBpushd\fP [\fB\-n\fP] [\fIdir\fP] -.PD -Adds a directory to the top of the directory stack, or rotates -the stack, making the new top of the stack the current working -directory. With no arguments, exchanges the top two directories -and returns 0, unless the directory stack is empty. -Arguments, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-n -Suppresses the normal change of directory when adding directories -to the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. -.TP -\fB+\fP\fIn\fP -Rotates the stack so that the \fIn\fPth directory -(counting from the left of the list shown by -.BR dirs , -starting with zero) -is at the top. -.TP -\fB\-\fP\fIn\fP -Rotates the stack so that the \fIn\fPth directory -(counting from the right of the list shown by -.BR dirs , -starting with zero) is at the top. -.TP -.I dir -Adds -.I dir -to the directory stack at the top, making it the -new current working directory as if it had been supplied as the argument -to the \fBcd\fP builtin. -.PD -.PP -If the -.B pushd -command is successful, a -.B dirs -is performed as well. -If the first form is used, -.B pushd -returns 0 unless the cd to -.I dir -fails. With the second form, -.B pushd -returns 0 unless the directory stack is empty, -a non-existent directory stack element is specified, -or the directory change to the specified new current directory -fails. -.RE -.TP -\fBpwd\fP [\fB\-LP\fP] -Print the absolute pathname of the current working directory. -The pathname printed contains no symbolic links if the -.B \-P -option is supplied or the -.B \-o physical -option to the -.B set -builtin command is enabled. -If the -.B \-L -option is used, the pathname printed may contain symbolic links. -The return status is 0 unless an error occurs while -reading the name of the current directory or an -invalid option is supplied. -.TP -\fBread\fP [\fB\-ers\fP] [\fB\-a\fP \fIaname\fP] [\fB\-d\fP \fIdelim\fP] [\fB\-i\fP \fItext\fP] [\fB\-n\fP \fInchars\fP] [\fB\-N\fP \fInchars\fP] [\fB\-p\fP \fIprompt\fP] [\fB\-t\fP \fItimeout\fP] [\fB\-u\fP \fIfd\fP] [\fIname\fP ...] -One line is read from the standard input, or from the file descriptor -\fIfd\fP supplied as an argument to the \fB\-u\fP option, and the first word -is assigned to the first -.IR name , -the second word to the second -.IR name , -and so on, with leftover words and their intervening separators assigned -to the last -.IR name . -If there are fewer words read from the input stream than names, -the remaining names are assigned empty values. -The characters in -.SM -.B IFS -are used to split the line into words using the same rules the shell -uses for expansion (described above under \fBWord Splitting\fP). -The backslash character (\fB\e\fP) may be used to remove any special -meaning for the next character read and for line continuation. -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-a \fIaname\fP -The words are assigned to sequential indices -of the array variable -.IR aname , -starting at 0. -.I aname -is unset before any new values are assigned. -Other \fIname\fP arguments are ignored. -.TP -.B \-d \fIdelim\fP -The first character of \fIdelim\fP is used to terminate the input line, -rather than newline. -.TP -.B \-e -If the standard input -is coming from a terminal, -.B readline -(see -.SM -.B READLINE -above) is used to obtain the line. -Readline uses the current (or default, if line editing was not previously -active) editing settings. -.TP -.B \-i \fItext\fP -If -.B readline -is being used to read the line, \fItext\fP is placed into the editing -buffer before editing begins. -.TP -.B \-n \fInchars\fP -\fBread\fP returns after reading \fInchars\fP characters rather than -waiting for a complete line of input, but honor a delimiter if fewer -than \fInchars\fP characters are read before the delimiter. -.TP -.B \-N \fInchars\fP -\fBread\fP returns after reading exactly \fInchars\fP characters rather -than waiting for a complete line of input, unless EOF is encountered or -\fBread\fP times out. -Delimiter characters encountered in the input are -not treated specially and do not cause \fBread\fP to return until -\fInchars\fP characters are read. -.TP -.B \-p \fIprompt\fP -Display \fIprompt\fP on standard error, without a -trailing newline, before attempting to read any input. The prompt -is displayed only if input is coming from a terminal. -.TP -.B \-r -Backslash does not act as an escape character. -The backslash is considered to be part of the line. -In particular, a backslash-newline pair may not be used as a line -continuation. -.TP -.B \-s -Silent mode. If input is coming from a terminal, characters are -not echoed. -.TP -.B \-t \fItimeout\fP -Cause \fBread\fP to time out and return failure if a complete line of -input (or a specified number of characters) -is not read within \fItimeout\fP seconds. -\fItimeout\fP may be a decimal number with a fractional portion following -the decimal point. -This option is only effective if \fBread\fP is reading input from a -terminal, pipe, or other special file; it has no effect when reading -from regular files. -If \fBread\fP times out, \fBread\fP saves any partial input read into -the specified variable \fIname\fP. -If \fItimeout\fP is 0, \fBread\fP returns immediately, without trying to -read any data. The exit status is 0 if input is available on -the specified file descriptor, non-zero otherwise. -The exit status is greater than 128 if the timeout is exceeded. -.TP -.B \-u \fIfd\fP -Read input from file descriptor \fIfd\fP. -.PD -.PP -If no -.I names -are supplied, the line read is assigned to the variable -.SM -.BR REPLY . -The return code is zero, unless end-of-file is encountered, \fBread\fP -times out (in which case the return code is greater than 128), -a variable assignment error (such as assigning to a readonly variable) occurs, -or an invalid file descriptor is supplied as the argument to \fB\-u\fP. -.RE -.TP -\fBreadonly\fP [\fB\-aAf\fP] [\fB\-p\fP] [\fIname\fP[=\fIword\fP] ...] -.PD -The given -\fInames\fP are marked readonly; the values of these -.I names -may not be changed by subsequent assignment. -If the -.B \-f -option is supplied, the functions corresponding to the -\fInames\fP are so -marked. -The -.B \-a -option restricts the variables to indexed arrays; the -.B \-A -option restricts the variables to associative arrays. -If both options are supplied, -.B \-A -takes precedence. -If no -.I name -arguments are given, or if the -.B \-p -option is supplied, a list of all readonly names is printed. -The other options may be used to restrict the output to a subset of -the set of readonly names. -The -.B \-p -option causes output to be displayed in a format that -may be reused as input. -If a variable name is followed by =\fIword\fP, the value of -the variable is set to \fIword\fP. -The return status is 0 unless an invalid option is encountered, -one of the -.I names -is not a valid shell variable name, or -.B \-f -is supplied with a -.I name -that is not a function. -.TP -\fBreturn\fP [\fIn\fP] -Causes a function to stop executing and return the value specified by -.I n -to its caller. -If -.I n -is omitted, the return status is that of the last command -executed in the function body. If -.B return -is used outside a function, -but during execution of a script by the -.B . -(\fBsource\fP) command, it causes the shell to stop executing -that script and return either -.I n -or the exit status of the last command executed within the -script as the exit status of the script. -If \fIn\fP is supplied, the return value is its least significant -8 bits. -The return status is non-zero if -.B return -is supplied a non-numeric argument, or -is used outside a -function and not during execution of a script by \fB.\fP\^ or \fBsource\fP. -Any command associated with the \fBRETURN\fP trap is executed -before execution resumes after the function or script. -.TP -\fBset\fP [\fB\-\-abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT\fP] [\fB\-o\fP \fIoption\-name\fP] [\fIarg\fP ...] -.PD 0 -.TP -\fBset\fP [\fB+abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT\fP] [\fB+o\fP \fIoption\-name\fP] [\fIarg\fP ...] -.PD -Without options, the name and value of each shell variable are displayed -in a format that can be reused as input -for setting or resetting the currently-set variables. -Read-only variables cannot be reset. -In \fIposix\fP mode, only shell variables are listed. -The output is sorted according to the current locale. -When options are specified, they set or unset shell attributes. -Any arguments remaining after option processing are treated -as values for the positional parameters and are assigned, in order, to -.BR $1 , -.BR $2 , -.B ... -.BR $\fIn\fP . -Options, if specified, have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP 8 -.B \-a -Automatically mark variables and functions which are modified or -created for export to the environment of subsequent commands. -.TP 8 -.B \-b -Report the status of terminated background jobs -immediately, rather than before the next primary prompt. This is -effective only when job control is enabled. -.TP 8 -.B \-e -Exit immediately if a -\fIpipeline\fP (which may consist of a single \fIsimple command\fP), -a \fIlist\fP, -or a \fIcompound command\fP -(see -.SM -.B SHELL GRAMMAR -above), exits with a non-zero status. -The shell does not exit if the -command that fails is part of the command list immediately following a -.B while -or -.B until -keyword, -part of the test following the -.B if -or -.B elif -reserved words, part of any command executed in a -.B && -or -.B || -list except the command following the final \fB&&\fP or \fB||\fP, -any command in a pipeline but the last, -or if the command's return value is -being inverted with -.BR ! . -If a compound command other than a subshell -returns a non-zero status because a command failed -while \fB\-e\fP was being ignored, the shell does not exit. -A trap on \fBERR\fP, if set, is executed before the shell exits. -This option applies to the shell environment and each subshell environment -separately (see -.SM -.B "COMMAND EXECUTION ENVIRONMENT" -above), and may cause -subshells to exit before executing all the commands in the subshell. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -If a compound command or shell function executes in a context -where \fB\-e\fP is being ignored, -none of the commands executed within the compound command or function body -will be affected by the \fB\-e\fP setting, even if \fB\-e\fP is set -and a command returns a failure status. -If a compound command or shell function sets \fB\-e\fP while executing in -a context where \fB\-e\fP is ignored, that setting will not have any -effect until the compound command or the command containing the function -call completes. -.TP 8 -.B \-f -Disable pathname expansion. -.TP 8 -.B \-h -Remember the location of commands as they are looked up for execution. -This is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B \-k -All arguments in the form of assignment statements -are placed in the environment for a command, not just -those that precede the command name. -.TP 8 -.B \-m -Monitor mode. Job control is enabled. This option is on -by default for interactive shells on systems that support -it (see -.SM -.B JOB CONTROL -above). -All processes run in a separate process group. -When a background job completes, the shell prints a line -containing its exit status. -.TP 8 -.B \-n -Read commands but do not execute them. This may be used to -check a shell script for syntax errors. This is ignored by -interactive shells. -.TP 8 -.B \-o \fIoption\-name\fP -The \fIoption\-name\fP can be one of the following: -.RS -.TP 8 -.B allexport -Same as -.BR \-a . -.TP 8 -.B braceexpand -Same as -.BR \-B . -.TP 8 -.B emacs -Use an emacs-style command line editing interface. This is enabled -by default when the shell is interactive, unless the shell is started -with the -.B \-\-noediting -option. -This also affects the editing interface used for \fBread \-e\fP. -.TP 8 -.B errexit -Same as -.BR \-e . -.TP 8 -.B errtrace -Same as -.BR \-E . -.TP 8 -.B functrace -Same as -.BR \-T . -.TP 8 -.B hashall -Same as -.BR \-h . -.TP 8 -.B histexpand -Same as -.BR \-H . -.TP 8 -.B history -Enable command history, as described above under -.SM -.BR HISTORY . -This option is on by default in interactive shells. -.TP 8 -.B ignoreeof -The effect is as if the shell command -.if t \f(CWIGNOREEOF=10\fP -.if n ``IGNOREEOF=10'' -had been executed -(see -.B Shell Variables -above). -.TP 8 -.B keyword -Same as -.BR \-k . -.TP 8 -.B monitor -Same as -.BR \-m . -.TP 8 -.B noclobber -Same as -.BR \-C . -.TP 8 -.B noexec -Same as -.BR \-n . -.TP 8 -.B noglob -Same as -.BR \-f . -.TP 8 -.B nolog -Currently ignored. -.TP 8 -.B notify -Same as -.BR \-b . -.TP 8 -.B nounset -Same as -.BR \-u . -.TP 8 -.B onecmd -Same as -.BR \-t . -.TP 8 -.B physical -Same as -.BR \-P . -.TP 8 -.B pipefail -If set, the return value of a pipeline is the value of the last -(rightmost) command to exit with a non-zero status, or zero if all -commands in the pipeline exit successfully. -This option is disabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B posix -Change the behavior of -.B bash -where the default operation differs -from the POSIX standard to match the standard (\fIposix mode\fP). -See -.SM -.B "SEE ALSO" -below for a reference to a document that details how posix mode affects -bash's behavior. -.TP 8 -.B privileged -Same as -.BR \-p . -.TP 8 -.B verbose -Same as -.BR \-v . -.TP 8 -.B vi -Use a vi-style command line editing interface. -This also affects the editing interface used for \fBread \-e\fP. -.TP 8 -.B xtrace -Same as -.BR \-x . -.sp .5 -.PP -If -.B \-o -is supplied with no \fIoption\-name\fP, the values of the current options are -printed. -If -.B +o -is supplied with no \fIoption\-name\fP, a series of -.B set -commands to recreate the current option settings is displayed on -the standard output. -.RE -.TP 8 -.B \-p -Turn on -.I privileged -mode. In this mode, the -.SM -.B $ENV -and -.SM -.B $BASH_ENV -files are not processed, shell functions are not inherited from the -environment, and the -.SM -.BR SHELLOPTS , -.SM -.BR BASHOPTS , -.SM -.BR CDPATH , -and -.SM -.B GLOBIGNORE -variables, if they appear in the environment, are ignored. -If the shell is started with the effective user (group) id not equal to the -real user (group) id, and the \fB\-p\fP option is not supplied, these actions -are taken and the effective user id is set to the real user id. -If the \fB\-p\fP option is supplied at startup, the effective user id is -not reset. -Turning this option off causes the effective user -and group ids to be set to the real user and group ids. -.TP 8 -.B \-t -Exit after reading and executing one command. -.TP 8 -.B \-u -Treat unset variables and parameters other than the special -parameters "@" and "*" as an error when performing -parameter expansion. If expansion is attempted on an -unset variable or parameter, the shell prints an error message, and, -if not interactive, exits with a non-zero status. -.TP 8 -.B \-v -Print shell input lines as they are read. -.TP 8 -.B \-x -After expanding each \fIsimple command\fP, -\fBfor\fP command, \fBcase\fP command, \fBselect\fP command, or -arithmetic \fBfor\fP command, display the expanded value of -.SM -.BR PS4 , -followed by the command and its expanded arguments -or associated word list. -.TP 8 -.B \-B -The shell performs brace expansion (see -.B Brace Expansion -above). This is on by default. -.TP 8 -.B \-C -If set, -.B bash -does not overwrite an existing file with the -.BR > , -.BR >& , -and -.B <> -redirection operators. This may be overridden when -creating output files by using the redirection operator -.B >| -instead of -.BR > . -.TP 8 -.B \-E -If set, any trap on \fBERR\fP is inherited by shell functions, command -substitutions, and commands executed in a subshell environment. -The \fBERR\fP trap is normally not inherited in such cases. -.TP 8 -.B \-H -Enable -.B ! -style history substitution. This option is on by -default when the shell is interactive. -.TP 8 -.B \-P -If set, the shell does not resolve symbolic links when executing -commands such as -.B cd -that change the current working directory. It uses the -physical directory structure instead. By default, -.B bash -follows the logical chain of directories when performing commands -which change the current directory. -.TP 8 -.B \-T -If set, any traps on \fBDEBUG\fP and \fBRETURN\fP are inherited by shell -functions, command substitutions, and commands executed in a -subshell environment. -The \fBDEBUG\fP and \fBRETURN\fP traps are normally not inherited -in such cases. -.TP 8 -.B \-\- -If no arguments follow this option, then the positional parameters are -unset. Otherwise, the positional parameters are set to the -\fIarg\fPs, even if some of them begin with a -.BR \- . -.TP 8 -.B \- -Signal the end of options, cause all remaining \fIarg\fPs to be -assigned to the positional parameters. The -.B \-x -and -.B \-v -options are turned off. -If there are no \fIarg\fPs, -the positional parameters remain unchanged. -.PD -.PP -The options are off by default unless otherwise noted. -Using + rather than \- causes these options to be turned off. -The options can also be specified as arguments to an invocation of -the shell. -The current set of options may be found in -.BR $\- . -The return status is always true unless an invalid option is encountered. -.RE -.TP -\fBshift\fP [\fIn\fP] -The positional parameters from \fIn\fP+1 ... are renamed to -.B $1 -.B .... -Parameters represented by the numbers \fB$#\fP -down to \fB$#\fP\-\fIn\fP+1 are unset. -.I n -must be a non-negative number less than or equal to \fB$#\fP. -If -.I n -is 0, no parameters are changed. -If -.I n -is not given, it is assumed to be 1. -If -.I n -is greater than \fB$#\fP, the positional parameters are not changed. -The return status is greater than zero if -.I n -is greater than -.B $# -or less than zero; otherwise 0. -.TP -\fBshopt\fP [\fB\-pqsu\fP] [\fB\-o\fP] [\fIoptname\fP ...] -Toggle the values of settings controlling optional shell behavior. -The settings can be either those listed below, or, if the -.B \-o -option is used, those available with the -.B \-o -option to the \fBset\fP builtin command. -With no options, or with the -.B \-p -option, a list of all settable options is displayed, with -an indication of whether or not each is set. -The \fB\-p\fP option causes output to be displayed in a form that -may be reused as input. -Other options have the following meanings: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-s -Enable (set) each \fIoptname\fP. -.TP -.B \-u -Disable (unset) each \fIoptname\fP. -.TP -.B \-q -Suppresses normal output (quiet mode); the return status indicates -whether the \fIoptname\fP is set or unset. -If multiple \fIoptname\fP arguments are given with -.BR \-q , -the return status is zero if all \fIoptnames\fP are enabled; non-zero -otherwise. -.TP -.B \-o -Restricts the values of \fIoptname\fP to be those defined for the -.B \-o -option to the -.B set -builtin. -.PD -.PP -If either -.B \-s -or -.B \-u -is used with no \fIoptname\fP arguments, -.B shopt -shows only those options which are set or unset, respectively. -Unless otherwise noted, the \fBshopt\fP options are disabled (unset) -by default. -.PP -The return status when listing options is zero if all \fIoptnames\fP -are enabled, non-zero otherwise. When setting or unsetting options, -the return status is zero unless an \fIoptname\fP is not a valid shell -option. -.PP -The list of \fBshopt\fP options is: -.if t .sp .5v -.if n .sp 1v -.PD 0 -.TP 8 -.B autocd -If set, a command name that is the name of a directory is executed as if -it were the argument to the \fBcd\fP command. -This option is only used by interactive shells. -.TP 8 -.B cdable_vars -If set, an argument to the -.B cd -builtin command that -is not a directory is assumed to be the name of a variable whose -value is the directory to change to. -.TP 8 -.B cdspell -If set, minor errors in the spelling of a directory component in a -.B cd -command will be corrected. -The errors checked for are transposed characters, -a missing character, and one character too many. -If a correction is found, the corrected filename is printed, -and the command proceeds. -This option is only used by interactive shells. -.TP 8 -.B checkhash -If set, \fBbash\fP checks that a command found in the hash -table exists before trying to execute it. If a hashed command no -longer exists, a normal path search is performed. -.TP 8 -.B checkjobs -If set, \fBbash\fP lists the status of any stopped and running jobs before -exiting an interactive shell. If any jobs are running, this causes -the exit to be deferred until a second exit is attempted without an -intervening command (see -.SM -.B "JOB CONTROL" -above). The shell always -postpones exiting if any jobs are stopped. -.TP 8 -.B checkwinsize -If set, \fBbash\fP checks the window size after each command -and, if necessary, updates the values of -.SM -.B LINES -and -.SM -.BR COLUMNS . -.TP 8 -.B cmdhist -If set, -.B bash -attempts to save all lines of a multiple-line -command in the same history entry. This allows -easy re-editing of multi-line commands. -.TP 8 -.B compat31 -If set, -.B bash -changes its behavior to that of version 3.1 with respect to quoted -arguments to the \fB[[\fP conditional command's \fB=~\fP operator -and locale-specific string comparison when using the \fB[[\fP -conditional command's \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators. -Bash versions prior to bash-4.1 use ASCII collation and -.IR strcmp (3); -bash-4.1 and later use the current locale's collation sequence and -.IR strcoll (3). -.TP 8 -.B compat32 -If set, -.B bash -changes its behavior to that of version 3.2 with respect to -locale-specific string comparison when using the \fB[[\fP -conditional command's \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators (see previous item). -.TP 8 -.B compat40 -If set, -.B bash -changes its behavior to that of version 4.0 with respect to locale-specific -string comparison when using the \fB[[\fP -conditional command's \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators (see description of -\fBcompat31\fP) -and the effect of interrupting a command list. -Bash versions 4.0 and later interrupt the list as if the shell received the -interrupt; previous versions continue with the next command in the list. -.TP 8 -.B compat41 -If set, -.BR bash , -when in \fIposix\fP mode, treats a single quote in a double-quoted -parameter expansion as a special character. The single quotes must match -(an even number) and the characters between the single quotes are considered -quoted. This is the behavior of posix mode through version 4.1. -The default bash behavior remains as in previous versions. -.TP 8 -.B compat42 -If set, -.B bash -does not process the replacement string in the pattern substitution word -expansion using quote removal. -.TP 8 -.B complete_fullquote -If set, -.B bash -quotes all shell metacharacters in filenames and directory names when -performing completion. -If not set, -.B bash -removes metacharacters such as the dollar sign from the set of -characters that will be quoted in completed filenames -when these metacharacters appear in shell variable references in words to be -completed. -This means that dollar signs in variable names that expand to directories -will not be quoted; -however, any dollar signs appearing in filenames will not be quoted, either. -This is active only when bash is using backslashes to quote completed -filenames. -This variable is set by default, which is the default bash behavior in -versions through 4.2. -.TP 8 -.B direxpand -If set, -.B bash -replaces directory names with the results of word expansion when performing -filename completion. This changes the contents of the readline editing -buffer. -If not set, -.B bash -attempts to preserve what the user typed. -.TP 8 -.B dirspell -If set, -.B bash -attempts spelling correction on directory names during word completion -if the directory name initially supplied does not exist. -.TP 8 -.B dotglob -If set, -.B bash -includes filenames beginning with a `.' in the results of pathname -expansion. -.TP 8 -.B execfail -If set, a non-interactive shell will not exit if -it cannot execute the file specified as an argument to the -.B exec -builtin command. An interactive shell does not exit if -.B exec -fails. -.TP 8 -.B expand_aliases -If set, aliases are expanded as described above under -.SM -.BR ALIASES . -This option is enabled by default for interactive shells. -.TP 8 -.B extdebug -If set, behavior intended for use by debuggers is enabled: -.RS -.TP -.B 1. -The \fB\-F\fP option to the \fBdeclare\fP builtin displays the source -file name and line number corresponding to each function name supplied -as an argument. -.TP -.B 2. -If the command run by the \fBDEBUG\fP trap returns a non-zero value, the -next command is skipped and not executed. -.TP -.B 3. -If the command run by the \fBDEBUG\fP trap returns a value of 2, and the -shell is executing in a subroutine (a shell function or a shell script -executed by the \fB.\fP or \fBsource\fP builtins), a call to -\fBreturn\fP is simulated. -.TP -.B 4. -.SM -.B BASH_ARGC -and -.SM -.B BASH_ARGV -are updated as described in their descriptions above. -.TP -.B 5. -Function tracing is enabled: command substitution, shell functions, and -subshells invoked with \fB(\fP \fIcommand\fP \fB)\fP inherit the -\fBDEBUG\fP and \fBRETURN\fP traps. -.TP -.B 6. -Error tracing is enabled: command substitution, shell functions, and -subshells invoked with \fB(\fP \fIcommand\fP \fB)\fP inherit the -\fBERR\fP trap. -.RE -.TP 8 -.B extglob -If set, the extended pattern matching features described above under -\fBPathname Expansion\fP are enabled. -.TP 8 -.B extquote -If set, \fB$\fP\(aq\fIstring\fP\(aq and \fB$\fP"\fIstring\fP" quoting is -performed within \fB${\fP\fIparameter\fP\fB}\fP expansions -enclosed in double quotes. This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B failglob -If set, patterns which fail to match filenames during pathname expansion -result in an expansion error. -.TP 8 -.B force_fignore -If set, the suffixes specified by the -.SM -.B FIGNORE -shell variable -cause words to be ignored when performing word completion even if -the ignored words are the only possible completions. -See -.SM -\fBSHELL VARIABLES\fP -above for a description of -.SM -.BR FIGNORE . -This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B globasciiranges -If set, range expressions used in pattern matching bracket expressions (see -.SM -.B Pattern Matching -above) behave as if in the traditional C locale when performing -comparisons. That is, the current locale's collating sequence -is not taken into account, so -.B b -will not collate between -.B A -and -.BR B , -and upper-case and lower-case ASCII characters will collate together. -.TP 8 -.B globstar -If set, the pattern \fB**\fP used in a pathname expansion context will -match all files and zero or more directories and subdirectories. -If the pattern is followed by a \fB/\fP, only directories and -subdirectories match. -.TP 8 -.B gnu_errfmt -If set, shell error messages are written in the standard GNU error -message format. -.TP 8 -.B histappend -If set, the history list is appended to the file named by the value -of the -.SM -.B HISTFILE -variable when the shell exits, rather than overwriting the file. -.TP 8 -.B histreedit -If set, and -.B readline -is being used, a user is given the opportunity to re-edit a -failed history substitution. -.TP 8 -.B histverify -If set, and -.B readline -is being used, the results of history substitution are not immediately -passed to the shell parser. Instead, the resulting line is loaded into -the \fBreadline\fP editing buffer, allowing further modification. -.TP 8 -.B hostcomplete -If set, and -.B readline -is being used, \fBbash\fP will attempt to perform hostname completion when a -word containing a \fB@\fP is being completed (see -.B Completing -under -.SM -.B READLINE -above). -This is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B huponexit -If set, \fBbash\fP will send -.SM -.B SIGHUP -to all jobs when an interactive login shell exits. -.TP 8 -.B interactive_comments -If set, allow a word beginning with -.B # -to cause that word and all remaining characters on that -line to be ignored in an interactive shell (see -.SM -.B COMMENTS -above). This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B lastpipe -If set, and job control is not active, the shell runs the last command of -a pipeline not executed in the background in the current shell environment. -.TP 8 -.B lithist -If set, and the -.B cmdhist -option is enabled, multi-line commands are saved to the history with -embedded newlines rather than using semicolon separators where possible. -.TP 8 -.B login_shell -The shell sets this option if it is started as a login shell (see -.SM -.B "INVOCATION" -above). -The value may not be changed. -.TP 8 -.B mailwarn -If set, and a file that \fBbash\fP is checking for mail has been -accessed since the last time it was checked, the message ``The mail in -\fImailfile\fP has been read'' is displayed. -.TP 8 -.B no_empty_cmd_completion -If set, and -.B readline -is being used, -.B bash -will not attempt to search the -.SM -.B PATH -for possible completions when -completion is attempted on an empty line. -.TP 8 -.B nocaseglob -If set, -.B bash -matches filenames in a case\-insensitive fashion when performing pathname -expansion (see -.B Pathname Expansion -above). -.TP 8 -.B nocasematch -If set, -.B bash -matches patterns in a case\-insensitive fashion when performing matching -while executing \fBcase\fP or \fB[[\fP conditional commands. -.TP 8 -.B nullglob -If set, -.B bash -allows patterns which match no -files (see -.B Pathname Expansion -above) -to expand to a null string, rather than themselves. -.TP 8 -.B progcomp -If set, the programmable completion facilities (see -\fBProgrammable Completion\fP above) are enabled. -This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B promptvars -If set, prompt strings undergo -parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic -expansion, and quote removal after being expanded as described in -.SM -.B PROMPTING -above. This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B restricted_shell -The shell sets this option if it is started in restricted mode (see -.SM -.B "RESTRICTED SHELL" -below). -The value may not be changed. -This is not reset when the startup files are executed, allowing -the startup files to discover whether or not a shell is restricted. -.TP 8 -.B shift_verbose -If set, the -.B shift -builtin prints an error message when the shift count exceeds the -number of positional parameters. -.TP 8 -.B sourcepath -If set, the -\fBsource\fP (\fB.\fP) builtin uses the value of -.SM -.B PATH -to find the directory containing the file supplied as an argument. -This option is enabled by default. -.TP 8 -.B xpg_echo -If set, the \fBecho\fP builtin expands backslash-escape sequences -by default. -.RE -.PD -.TP -\fBsuspend\fP [\fB\-f\fP] -Suspend the execution of this shell until it receives a -.SM -.B SIGCONT -signal. A login shell cannot be suspended; the -.B \-f -option can be used to override this and force the suspension. -The return status is 0 unless the shell is a login shell and -.B \-f -is not supplied, or if job control is not enabled. -.TP -\fBtest\fP \fIexpr\fP -.PD 0 -.TP -\fB[\fP \fIexpr\fP \fB]\fP -Return a status of 0 (true) or 1 (false) depending on -the evaluation of the conditional expression -.IR expr . -Each operator and operand must be a separate argument. -Expressions are composed of the primaries described above under -.SM -.BR "CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS" . -\fBtest\fP does not accept any options, nor does it accept and ignore -an argument of \fB\-\-\fP as signifying the end of options. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Expressions may be combined using the following operators, listed -in decreasing order of precedence. -The evaluation depends on the number of arguments; see below. -Operator precedence is used when there are five or more arguments. -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B ! \fIexpr\fP -True if -.I expr -is false. -.TP -.B ( \fIexpr\fP ) -Returns the value of \fIexpr\fP. -This may be used to override the normal precedence of operators. -.TP -\fIexpr1\fP \-\fBa\fP \fIexpr2\fP -True if both -.I expr1 -and -.I expr2 -are true. -.TP -\fIexpr1\fP \-\fBo\fP \fIexpr2\fP -True if either -.I expr1 -or -.I expr2 -is true. -.PD -.PP -\fBtest\fP and \fB[\fP evaluate conditional -expressions using a set of rules based on the number of arguments. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -.PD 0 -.TP -0 arguments -The expression is false. -.TP -1 argument -The expression is true if and only if the argument is not null. -.TP -2 arguments -If the first argument is \fB!\fP, the expression is true if and -only if the second argument is null. -If the first argument is one of the unary conditional operators listed above -under -.SM -.BR "CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS" , -the expression is true if the unary test is true. -If the first argument is not a valid unary conditional operator, the expression -is false. -.TP -3 arguments -The following conditions are applied in the order listed. -If the second argument is one of the binary conditional operators listed above -under -.SM -.BR "CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS" , -the result of the expression is the result of the binary test using -the first and third arguments as operands. -The \fB\-a\fP and \fB\-o\fP operators are considered binary operators -when there are three arguments. -If the first argument is \fB!\fP, the value is the negation of -the two-argument test using the second and third arguments. -If the first argument is exactly \fB(\fP and the third argument is -exactly \fB)\fP, the result is the one-argument test of the second -argument. -Otherwise, the expression is false. -.TP -4 arguments -If the first argument is \fB!\fP, the result is the negation of -the three-argument expression composed of the remaining arguments. -Otherwise, the expression is parsed and evaluated according to -precedence using the rules listed above. -.TP -5 or more arguments -The expression is parsed and evaluated according to precedence -using the rules listed above. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -.LP -When used with \fBtest\fP or \fB[\fP, the \fB<\fP and \fB>\fP operators -sort lexicographically using ASCII ordering. -.RE -.PD -.TP -.B times -Print the accumulated user and system times for the shell and -for processes run from the shell. The return status is 0. -.TP -\fBtrap\fP [\fB\-lp\fP] [[\fIarg\fP] \fIsigspec\fP ...] -The command -.I arg -is to be read and executed when the shell receives -signal(s) -.IR sigspec . -If -.I arg -is absent (and there is a single \fIsigspec\fP) or -.BR \- , -each specified signal is -reset to its original disposition (the value it had -upon entrance to the shell). -If -.I arg -is the null string the signal specified by each -.I sigspec -is ignored by the shell and by the commands it invokes. -If -.I arg -is not present and -.B \-p -has been supplied, then the trap commands associated with each -.I sigspec -are displayed. -If no arguments are supplied or if only -.B \-p -is given, -.B trap -prints the list of commands associated with each signal. -The -.B \-l -option causes the shell to print a list of signal names and -their corresponding numbers. -Each -.I sigspec -is either -a signal name defined in <\fIsignal.h\fP>, or a signal number. -Signal names are case insensitive and the -.SM -.B SIG -prefix is optional. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -If a -.I sigspec -is -.SM -.B EXIT -(0) the command -.I arg -is executed on exit from the shell. -If a -.I sigspec -is -.SM -.BR DEBUG , -the command -.I arg -is executed before every \fIsimple command\fP, \fIfor\fP command, -\fIcase\fP command, \fIselect\fP command, every arithmetic \fIfor\fP -command, and before the first command executes in a shell function (see -.SM -.B SHELL GRAMMAR -above). -Refer to the description of the \fBextdebug\fP option to the -\fBshopt\fP builtin for details of its effect on the \fBDEBUG\fP trap. -If a -.I sigspec -is -.SM -.BR RETURN , -the command -.I arg -is executed each time a shell function or a script executed with -the \fB.\fP or \fBsource\fP builtins finishes executing. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -If a -.I sigspec -is -.SM -.BR ERR , -the command -.I arg -is executed whenever a -a pipeline (which may consist of a single simple -command), a list, or a compound command returns a -non\-zero exit status, -subject to the following conditions. -The -.SM -.B ERR -trap is not executed if the failed -command is part of the command list immediately following a -.B while -or -.B until -keyword, -part of the test in an -.I if -statement, part of a command executed in a -.B && -or -.B || -list except the command following the final \fB&&\fP or \fB||\fP, -any command in a pipeline but the last, -or if the command's return value is -being inverted using -.BR ! . -These are the same conditions obeyed by the \fBerrexit\fP (\fB\-e\fP) option. -.if t .sp 0.5 -.if n .sp 1 -Signals ignored upon entry to the shell cannot be trapped or reset. -Trapped signals that are not being ignored are reset to their original -values in a subshell or subshell environment when one is created. -The return status is false if any -.I sigspec -is invalid; otherwise -.B trap -returns true. -.TP -\fBtype\fP [\fB\-aftpP\fP] \fIname\fP [\fIname\fP ...] -With no options, -indicate how each -.I name -would be interpreted if used as a command name. -If the -.B \-t -option is used, -.B type -prints a string which is one of -.IR alias , -.IR keyword , -.IR function , -.IR builtin , -or -.I file -if -.I name -is an alias, shell reserved word, function, builtin, or disk file, -respectively. -If the -.I name -is not found, then nothing is printed, and an exit status of false -is returned. -If the -.B \-p -option is used, -.B type -either returns the name of the disk file -that would be executed if -.I name -were specified as a command name, -or nothing if -.if t \f(CWtype -t name\fP -.if n ``type -t name'' -would not return -.IR file . -The -.B \-P -option forces a -.SM -.B PATH -search for each \fIname\fP, even if -.if t \f(CWtype -t name\fP -.if n ``type -t name'' -would not return -.IR file . -If a command is hashed, -.B \-p -and -.B \-P -print the hashed value, which is not necessarily the file that appears -first in -.SM -.BR PATH . -If the -.B \-a -option is used, -.B type -prints all of the places that contain -an executable named -.IR name . -This includes aliases and functions, -if and only if the -.B \-p -option is not also used. -The table of hashed commands is not consulted -when using -.BR \-a . -The -.B \-f -option suppresses shell function lookup, as with the \fBcommand\fP builtin. -.B type -returns true if all of the arguments are found, false if -any are not found. -.TP -\fBulimit\fP [\fB\-HSTabcdefilmnpqrstuvx\fP [\fIlimit\fP]] -Provides control over the resources available to the shell and to -processes started by it, on systems that allow such control. -The \fB\-H\fP and \fB\-S\fP options specify that the hard or soft limit is -set for the given resource. -A hard limit cannot be increased by a non-root user once it is set; -a soft limit may be increased up to the value of the hard limit. -If neither \fB\-H\fP nor \fB\-S\fP is specified, both the soft and hard -limits are set. -The value of -.I limit -can be a number in the unit specified for the resource -or one of the special values -.BR hard , -.BR soft , -or -.BR unlimited , -which stand for the current hard limit, the current soft limit, and -no limit, respectively. -If -.I limit -is omitted, the current value of the soft limit of the resource is -printed, unless the \fB\-H\fP option is given. When more than one -resource is specified, the limit name and unit are printed before the value. -Other options are interpreted as follows: -.RS -.PD 0 -.TP -.B \-a -All current limits are reported -.TP -.B \-b -The maximum socket buffer size -.TP -.B \-c -The maximum size of core files created -.TP -.B \-d -The maximum size of a process's data segment -.TP -.B \-e -The maximum scheduling priority ("nice") -.TP -.B \-f -The maximum size of files written by the shell and its children -.TP -.B \-i -The maximum number of pending signals -.TP -.B \-l -The maximum size that may be locked into memory -.TP -.B \-m -The maximum resident set size (many systems do not honor this limit) -.TP -.B \-n -The maximum number of open file descriptors (most systems do not -allow this value to be set) -.TP -.B \-p -The pipe size in 512-byte blocks (this may not be set) -.TP -.B \-q -The maximum number of bytes in POSIX message queues -.TP -.B \-r -The maximum real-time scheduling priority -.TP -.B \-s -The maximum stack size -.TP -.B \-t -The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds -.TP -.B \-u -The maximum number of processes available to a single user -.TP -.B \-v -The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the shell and, on -some systems, to its children -.TP -.B \-x -The maximum number of file locks -.TP -.B \-T -The maximum number of threads -.PD -.PP -If -.I limit -is given, and the -.B \-a -option is not used, -\fIlimit\fP is the new value of the specified resource. -If no option is given, then -.B \-f -is assumed. Values are in 1024-byte increments, except for -.BR \-t , -which is in seconds; -.BR \-p , -which is in units of 512-byte blocks; -and -.BR \-T , -.BR \-b , -.BR \-n , -and -.BR \-u , -which are unscaled values. -The return status is 0 unless an invalid option or argument is supplied, -or an error occurs while setting a new limit. -.RE -.TP -\fBumask\fP [\fB\-p\fP] [\fB\-S\fP] [\fImode\fP] -The user file-creation mask is set to -.IR mode . -If -.I mode -begins with a digit, it -is interpreted as an octal number; otherwise -it is interpreted as a symbolic mode mask similar -to that accepted by -.IR chmod (1). -If -.I mode -is omitted, the current value of the mask is printed. -The -.B \-S -option causes the mask to be printed in symbolic form; the -default output is an octal number. -If the -.B \-p -option is supplied, and -.I mode -is omitted, the output is in a form that may be reused as input. -The return status is 0 if the mode was successfully changed or if -no \fImode\fP argument was supplied, and false otherwise. -.TP -\fBunalias\fP [\-\fBa\fP] [\fIname\fP ...] -Remove each \fIname\fP from the list of defined aliases. If -.B \-a -is supplied, all alias definitions are removed. The return -value is true unless a supplied -.I name -is not a defined alias. -.TP -\fBunset\fP [\-\fBfv\fP] [\-\fBn\fP] [\fIname\fP ...] -For each -.IR name , -remove the corresponding variable or function. -If the -.B \-v -option is given, each -.I name -refers to a shell variable, and that variable is removed. -Read-only variables may not be unset. -If -.B \-f -is specified, each -.I name -refers to a shell function, and the function definition -is removed. -If the -.B \-n -option is supplied, and \fIname\fP is a variable with the \fInameref\fP -attribute, \fIname\fP will be unset rather than the variable it -references. -\fB\-n\fP has no effect if the \fB\-f\fP option is supplied. -If no options are supplied, each \fIname\fP refers to a variable; if -there is no variable by that name, any function with that name is -unset. -Each unset variable or function is removed from the environment -passed to subsequent commands. -If any of -.SM -.BR COMP_WORDBREAKS , -.SM -.BR RANDOM , -.SM -.BR SECONDS , -.SM -.BR LINENO , -.SM -.BR HISTCMD , -.SM -.BR FUNCNAME , -.SM -.BR GROUPS , -or -.SM -.B DIRSTACK -are unset, they lose their special properties, even if they are -subsequently reset. The exit status is true unless a -.I name -is readonly. -.TP -\fBwait\fP [\fB\-n\fP] [\fIn ...\fP] -Wait for each specified child process and return its termination status. -Each -.I n -may be a process -ID or a job specification; if a job spec is given, all processes -in that job's pipeline are waited for. If -.I n -is not given, all currently active child processes -are waited for, and the return status is zero. -If the \fB\-n\fP option is supplied, \fBwait\fP waits for any job to -terminate and returns its exit status. -If -.I n -specifies a non-existent process or job, the return status is -127. Otherwise, the return status is the exit status of the last -process or job waited for. -.\" bash_builtins -.if \n(zZ=1 .ig zZ -.SH "RESTRICTED SHELL" -.\" rbash.1 -.zY -.PP -If -.B bash -is started with the name -.BR rbash , -or the -.B \-r -option is supplied at invocation, -the shell becomes restricted. -A restricted shell is used to -set up an environment more controlled than the standard shell. -It behaves identically to -.B bash -with the exception that the following are disallowed or not performed: -.IP \(bu -changing directories with \fBcd\fP -.IP \(bu -setting or unsetting the values of -.SM -.BR SHELL , -.SM -.BR PATH , -.SM -.BR ENV , -or -.SM -.B BASH_ENV -.IP \(bu -specifying command names containing -.B / -.IP \(bu -specifying a filename containing a -.B / -as an argument to the -.B . -builtin command -.IP \(bu -specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the -.B \-p -option to the -.B hash -builtin command -.IP \(bu -importing function definitions from the shell environment at startup -.IP \(bu -parsing the value of -.SM -.B SHELLOPTS -from the shell environment at startup -.IP \(bu -redirecting output using the >, >|, <>, >&, &>, and >> redirection operators -.IP \(bu -using the -.B exec -builtin command to replace the shell with another command -.IP \(bu -adding or deleting builtin commands with the -.B \-f -and -.B \-d -options to the -.B enable -builtin command -.IP \(bu -using the \fBenable\fP builtin command to enable disabled shell builtins -.IP \(bu -specifying the -.B \-p -option to the -.B command -builtin command -.IP \(bu -turning off restricted mode with -\fBset +r\fP or \fBset +o restricted\fP. -.PP -These restrictions are enforced after any startup files are read. -.PP -.ie \n(zY=1 When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed, -.el \{ When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed -(see -.SM -.B "COMMAND EXECUTION" -above), -\} -.B rbash -turns off any restrictions in the shell spawned to execute the -script. -.\" end of rbash.1 -.if \n(zY=1 .ig zY -.SH "SEE ALSO" -.PD 0 -.TP -\fIBash Reference Manual\fP, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey -.TP -\fIThe Gnu Readline Library\fP, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey -.TP -\fIThe Gnu History Library\fP, Brian Fox and Chet Ramey -.TP -\fIPortable Operating System Interface (POSIX) Part 2: Shell and Utilities\fP, IEEE -- -http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/ -.TP -http://tiswww.case.edu/~chet/bash/POSIX -- a description of posix mode -.TP -\fIsh\fP(1), \fIksh\fP(1), \fIcsh\fP(1) -.TP -\fIemacs\fP(1), \fIvi\fP(1) -.TP -\fIreadline\fP(3) -.PD -.SH FILES -.PD 0 -.TP -.FN /bin/bash -The \fBbash\fP executable -.TP -.FN /etc/profile -The systemwide initialization file, executed for login shells -.TP -.FN ~/.bash_profile -The personal initialization file, executed for login shells -.TP -.FN ~/.bashrc -The individual per-interactive-shell startup file -.TP -.FN ~/.bash_logout -The individual login shell cleanup file, executed when a login shell exits -.TP -.FN ~/.inputrc -Individual \fIreadline\fP initialization file -.PD -.SH AUTHORS -Brian Fox, Free Software Foundation -.br -bfox@gnu.org -.PP -Chet Ramey, Case Western Reserve University -.br -chet.ramey@case.edu -.SH BUG REPORTS -If you find a bug in -.B bash, -you should report it. But first, you should -make sure that it really is a bug, and that it appears in the latest -version of -.BR bash . -The latest version is always available from -\fIftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/\fP. -.PP -Once you have determined that a bug actually exists, use the -.I bashbug -command to submit a bug report. -If you have a fix, you are encouraged to mail that as well! -Suggestions and `philosophical' bug reports may be mailed -to \fIbug-bash@gnu.org\fP or posted to the Usenet -newsgroup -.BR gnu.bash.bug . -.PP -ALL bug reports should include: -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP 20 -The version number of \fBbash\fR -.TP -The hardware and operating system -.TP -The compiler used to compile -.TP -A description of the bug behaviour -.TP -A short script or `recipe' which exercises the bug -.PD -.PP -.I bashbug -inserts the first three items automatically into the template -it provides for filing a bug report. -.PP -Comments and bug reports concerning -this manual page should be directed to -.IR chet.ramey@case.edu . -.SH BUGS -.PP -It's too big and too slow. -.PP -There are some subtle differences between -.B bash -and traditional versions of -.BR sh , -mostly because of the -.SM -.B POSIX -specification. -.PP -Aliases are confusing in some uses. -.PP -Shell builtin commands and functions are not stoppable/restartable. -.PP -Compound commands and command sequences of the form `a ; b ; c' -are not handled gracefully when process suspension is attempted. -When a process is stopped, the shell immediately executes the next -command in the sequence. -It suffices to place the sequence of commands between -parentheses to force it into a subshell, which may be stopped as -a unit. -.PP -Array variables may not (yet) be exported. -.PP -There may be only one active coprocess at a time. -.zZ -.zY diff --git a/doc/bashref.texi~ b/doc/bashref.texi~ deleted file mode 100644 index 48c58c5ca..000000000 --- a/doc/bashref.texi~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,8719 +0,0 @@ -\input texinfo.tex @c -*- texinfo -*- -@c %**start of header -@setfilename bashref.info -@settitle Bash Reference Manual - -@include version.texi -@c %**end of header - -@copying -This text is a brief description of the features that are present in -the Bash shell (version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}). - -This is Edition @value{EDITION}, last updated @value{UPDATED}, -of @cite{The GNU Bash Reference Manual}, -for @code{Bash}, Version @value{VERSION}. - -Copyright @copyright{} 1988--2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -@quotation -Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document -under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or -any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no -Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. -A copy of the license is included in the section entitled -``GNU Free Documentation License''. -@end quotation -@end copying - -@defcodeindex bt -@defcodeindex rw -@set BashFeatures - -@dircategory Basics -@direntry -* Bash: (bash). The GNU Bourne-Again SHell. -@end direntry - -@finalout - -@titlepage -@title Bash Reference Manual -@subtitle Reference Documentation for Bash -@subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, for @code{Bash} Version @value{VERSION}. -@subtitle @value{UPDATED-MONTH} -@author Chet Ramey, Case Western Reserve University -@author Brian Fox, Free Software Foundation - -@page -@vskip 0pt plus 1filll -@insertcopying - -@end titlepage - -@contents - -@ifnottex -@node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir) -@top Bash Features - -This text is a brief description of the features that are present in -the Bash shell (version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}). -The Bash home page is @url{http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/}. - -This is Edition @value{EDITION}, last updated @value{UPDATED}, -of @cite{The GNU Bash Reference Manual}, -for @code{Bash}, Version @value{VERSION}. - -Bash contains features that appear in other popular shells, and some -features that only appear in Bash. Some of the shells that Bash has -borrowed concepts from are the Bourne Shell (@file{sh}), the Korn Shell -(@file{ksh}), and the C-shell (@file{csh} and its successor, -@file{tcsh}). The following menu breaks the features up into -categories, noting which features were inspired by other shells and -which are specific to Bash. - -This manual is meant as a brief introduction to features found in -Bash. The Bash manual page should be used as the definitive -reference on shell behavior. - -@menu -* Introduction:: An introduction to the shell. -* Definitions:: Some definitions used in the rest of this - manual. -* Basic Shell Features:: The shell "building blocks". -* Shell Builtin Commands:: Commands that are a part of the shell. -* Shell Variables:: Variables used or set by Bash. -* Bash Features:: Features found only in Bash. -* Job Control:: What job control is and how Bash allows you - to use it. -* Command Line Editing:: Chapter describing the command line - editing features. -* Using History Interactively:: Command History Expansion -* Installing Bash:: How to build and install Bash on your system. -* Reporting Bugs:: How to report bugs in Bash. -* Major Differences From The Bourne Shell:: A terse list of the differences - between Bash and historical - versions of /bin/sh. -* GNU Free Documentation License:: Copying and sharing this documentation. -* Indexes:: Various indexes for this manual. -@end menu -@end ifnottex - -@node Introduction -@chapter Introduction -@menu -* What is Bash?:: A short description of Bash. -* What is a shell?:: A brief introduction to shells. -@end menu - -@node What is Bash? -@section What is Bash? - -Bash is the shell, or command language interpreter, -for the @sc{gnu} operating system. -The name is an acronym for the @samp{Bourne-Again SHell}, -a pun on Stephen Bourne, the author of the direct ancestor of -the current Unix shell @code{sh}, -which appeared in the Seventh Edition Bell Labs Research version -of Unix. - -Bash is largely compatible with @code{sh} and incorporates useful -features from the Korn shell @code{ksh} and the C shell @code{csh}. -It is intended to be a conformant implementation of the @sc{ieee} -@sc{posix} Shell and Tools portion of the @sc{ieee} @sc{posix} -specification (@sc{ieee} Standard 1003.1). -It offers functional improvements over @code{sh} for both interactive and -programming use. - -While the @sc{gnu} operating system provides other shells, including -a version of @code{csh}, Bash is the default shell. -Like other @sc{gnu} software, Bash is quite portable. It currently runs -on nearly every version of Unix and a few other operating systems @minus{} -independently-supported ports exist for @sc{ms-dos}, @sc{os/2}, -and Windows platforms. - -@node What is a shell? -@section What is a shell? - -At its base, a shell is simply a macro processor that executes -commands. The term macro processor means functionality where text -and symbols are expanded to create larger expressions. - -A Unix shell is both a command interpreter and a programming -language. As a command interpreter, the shell provides the user -interface to the rich set of @sc{gnu} utilities. The programming -language features allow these utilities to be combined. -Files containing commands can be created, and become -commands themselves. These new commands have the same status as -system commands in directories such as @file{/bin}, allowing users -or groups to establish custom environments to automate their common -tasks. - -Shells may be used interactively or non-interactively. In -interactive mode, they accept input typed from the keyboard. -When executing non-interactively, shells execute commands read -from a file. - -A shell allows execution of @sc{gnu} commands, both synchronously and -asynchronously. -The shell waits for synchronous commands to complete before accepting -more input; asynchronous commands continue to execute in parallel -with the shell while it reads and executes additional commands. -The @dfn{redirection} constructs permit -fine-grained control of the input and output of those commands. -Moreover, the shell allows control over the contents of commands' -environments. - -Shells also provide a small set of built-in -commands (@dfn{builtins}) implementing functionality impossible -or inconvenient to obtain via separate utilities. -For example, @code{cd}, @code{break}, @code{continue}, and -@code{exec} cannot be implemented outside of the shell because -they directly manipulate the shell itself. -The @code{history}, @code{getopts}, @code{kill}, or @code{pwd} -builtins, among others, could be implemented in separate utilities, -but they are more convenient to use as builtin commands. -All of the shell builtins are described in -subsequent sections. - -While executing commands is essential, most of the power (and -complexity) of shells is due to their embedded programming -languages. Like any high-level language, the shell provides -variables, flow control constructs, quoting, and functions. - -Shells offer features geared specifically for -interactive use rather than to augment the programming language. -These interactive features include job control, command line -editing, command history and aliases. Each of these features is -described in this manual. - -@node Definitions -@chapter Definitions -These definitions are used throughout the remainder of this manual. - -@table @code - -@item POSIX -@cindex POSIX -A family of open system standards based on Unix. Bash -is primarily concerned with the Shell and Utilities portion of the -@sc{posix} 1003.1 standard. - -@item blank -A space or tab character. - -@item builtin -@cindex builtin -A command that is implemented internally by the shell itself, rather -than by an executable program somewhere in the file system. - -@item control operator -@cindex control operator -A @code{token} that performs a control function. It is a @code{newline} -or one of the following: -@samp{||}, @samp{&&}, @samp{&}, @samp{;}, @samp{;;}, -@samp{|}, @samp{|&}, @samp{(}, or @samp{)}. - -@item exit status -@cindex exit status -The value returned by a command to its caller. The value is restricted -to eight bits, so the maximum value is 255. - -@item field -@cindex field -A unit of text that is the result of one of the shell expansions. After -expansion, when executing a command, the resulting fields are used as -the command name and arguments. - -@item filename -@cindex filename -A string of characters used to identify a file. - -@item job -@cindex job -A set of processes comprising a pipeline, and any processes descended -from it, that are all in the same process group. - -@item job control -@cindex job control -A mechanism by which users can selectively stop (suspend) and restart -(resume) execution of processes. - -@item metacharacter -@cindex metacharacter -A character that, when unquoted, separates words. A metacharacter is -a @code{blank} or one of the following characters: -@samp{|}, @samp{&}, @samp{;}, @samp{(}, @samp{)}, @samp{<}, or -@samp{>}. - -@item name -@cindex name -@cindex identifier -A @code{word} consisting solely of letters, numbers, and underscores, -and beginning with a letter or underscore. @code{Name}s are used as -shell variable and function names. -Also referred to as an @code{identifier}. - -@item operator -@cindex operator, shell -A @code{control operator} or a @code{redirection operator}. -@xref{Redirections}, for a list of redirection operators. -Operators contain at least one unquoted @code{metacharacter}. - -@item process group -@cindex process group -A collection of related processes each having the same process -group @sc{id}. - -@item process group ID -@cindex process group ID -A unique identifier that represents a @code{process group} -during its lifetime. - -@item reserved word -@cindex reserved word -A @code{word} that has a special meaning to the shell. Most reserved -words introduce shell flow control constructs, such as @code{for} and -@code{while}. - -@item return status -@cindex return status -A synonym for @code{exit status}. - -@item signal -@cindex signal -A mechanism by which a process may be notified by the kernel -of an event occurring in the system. - -@item special builtin -@cindex special builtin -A shell builtin command that has been classified as special by the -@sc{posix} standard. - -@item token -@cindex token -A sequence of characters considered a single unit by the shell. -It is either a @code{word} or an @code{operator}. - -@item word -@cindex word -A sequence of characters treated as a unit by the shell. -Words may not include unquoted @code{metacharacters}. -@end table - -@node Basic Shell Features -@chapter Basic Shell Features -@cindex Bourne shell - -Bash is an acronym for @samp{Bourne-Again SHell}. -The Bourne shell is -the traditional Unix shell originally written by Stephen Bourne. -All of the Bourne shell builtin commands are available in Bash, -The rules for evaluation and quoting are taken from the @sc{posix} -specification for the `standard' Unix shell. - -This chapter briefly summarizes the shell's `building blocks': -commands, control structures, shell functions, shell @i{parameters}, -shell expansions, -@i{redirections}, which are a way to direct input and output from -and to named files, and how the shell executes commands. - -@menu -* Shell Syntax:: What your input means to the shell. -* Shell Commands:: The types of commands you can use. -* Shell Functions:: Grouping commands by name. -* Shell Parameters:: How the shell stores values. -* Shell Expansions:: How Bash expands parameters and the various - expansions available. -* Redirections:: A way to control where input and output go. -* Executing Commands:: What happens when you run a command. -* Shell Scripts:: Executing files of shell commands. -@end menu - -@node Shell Syntax -@section Shell Syntax -@menu -* Shell Operation:: The basic operation of the shell. -* Quoting:: How to remove the special meaning from characters. -* Comments:: How to specify comments. -@end menu - -When the shell reads input, it proceeds through a -sequence of operations. If the input indicates the beginning of a -comment, the shell ignores the comment symbol (@samp{#}), and the rest -of that line. - -Otherwise, roughly speaking, the shell reads its input and -divides the input into words and operators, employing the quoting rules -to select which meanings to assign various words and characters. - -The shell then parses these tokens into commands and other constructs, -removes the special meaning of certain words or characters, expands -others, redirects input and output as needed, executes the specified -command, waits for the command's exit status, and makes that exit status -available for further inspection or processing. - -@node Shell Operation -@subsection Shell Operation - -The following is a brief description of the shell's operation when it -reads and executes a command. Basically, the shell does the -following: - -@enumerate -@item -Reads its input from a file (@pxref{Shell Scripts}), from a string -supplied as an argument to the @option{-c} invocation option -(@pxref{Invoking Bash}), or from the user's terminal. - -@item -Breaks the input into words and operators, obeying the quoting rules -described in @ref{Quoting}. These tokens are separated by -@code{metacharacters}. Alias expansion is performed by this step -(@pxref{Aliases}). - -@item -Parses the tokens into simple and compound commands -(@pxref{Shell Commands}). - -@item -Performs the various shell expansions (@pxref{Shell Expansions}), breaking -the expanded tokens into lists of filenames (@pxref{Filename Expansion}) -and commands and arguments. - -@item -Performs any necessary redirections (@pxref{Redirections}) and removes -the redirection operators and their operands from the argument list. - -@item -Executes the command (@pxref{Executing Commands}). - -@item -Optionally waits for the command to complete and collects its exit -status (@pxref{Exit Status}). - -@end enumerate - -@node Quoting -@subsection Quoting -@cindex quoting -@menu -* Escape Character:: How to remove the special meaning from a single - character. -* Single Quotes:: How to inhibit all interpretation of a sequence - of characters. -* Double Quotes:: How to suppress most of the interpretation of a - sequence of characters. -* ANSI-C Quoting:: How to expand ANSI-C sequences in quoted strings. -* Locale Translation:: How to translate strings into different languages. -@end menu - -Quoting is used to remove the special meaning of certain -characters or words to the shell. Quoting can be used to -disable special treatment for special characters, to prevent -reserved words from being recognized as such, and to prevent -parameter expansion. - -Each of the shell metacharacters (@pxref{Definitions}) -has special meaning to the shell and must be quoted if it is to -represent itself. -When the command history expansion facilities are being used -(@pxref{History Interaction}), the -@var{history expansion} character, usually @samp{!}, must be quoted -to prevent history expansion. @xref{Bash History Facilities}, for -more details concerning history expansion. - -There are three quoting mechanisms: the -@var{escape character}, single quotes, and double quotes. - -@node Escape Character -@subsubsection Escape Character -A non-quoted backslash @samp{\} is the Bash escape character. -It preserves the literal value of the next character that follows, -with the exception of @code{newline}. If a @code{\newline} pair -appears, and the backslash itself is not quoted, the @code{\newline} -is treated as a line continuation (that is, it is removed from -the input stream and effectively ignored). - -@node Single Quotes -@subsubsection Single Quotes - -Enclosing characters in single quotes (@samp{'}) preserves the literal value -of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur -between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash. - -@node Double Quotes -@subsubsection Double Quotes - -Enclosing characters in double quotes (@samp{"}) preserves the literal value -of all characters within the quotes, with the exception of -@samp{$}, @samp{`}, @samp{\}, -and, when history expansion is enabled, @samp{!}. -The characters @samp{$} and @samp{`} -retain their special meaning within double quotes (@pxref{Shell Expansions}). -The backslash retains its special meaning only when followed by one of -the following characters: -@samp{$}, @samp{`}, @samp{"}, @samp{\}, or @code{newline}. -Within double quotes, backslashes that are followed by one of these -characters are removed. Backslashes preceding characters without a -special meaning are left unmodified. -A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with -a backslash. -If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless an @samp{!} -appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. -The backslash preceding the @samp{!} is not removed. - -The special parameters @samp{*} and @samp{@@} have special meaning -when in double quotes (@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@node ANSI-C Quoting -@subsubsection ANSI-C Quoting -@cindex quoting, ANSI - -Words of the form @code{$'@var{string}'} are treated specially. The -word expands to @var{string}, with backslash-escaped characters replaced -as specified by the ANSI C standard. Backslash escape sequences, if -present, are decoded as follows: - -@table @code -@item \a -alert (bell) -@item \b -backspace -@item \e -@itemx \E -an escape character (not ANSI C) -@item \f -form feed -@item \n -newline -@item \r -carriage return -@item \t -horizontal tab -@item \v -vertical tab -@item \\ -backslash -@item \' -single quote -@item \" -double quote -@item \@var{nnn} -the eight-bit character whose value is the octal value @var{nnn} -(one to three digits) -@item \x@var{HH} -the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal value @var{HH} -(one or two hex digits) -@item \u@var{HHHH} -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -@var{HHHH} (one to four hex digits) -@item \U@var{HHHHHHHH} -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -@var{HHHHHHHH} (one to eight hex digits) -@item \c@var{x} -a control-@var{x} character -@end table - -@noindent -The expanded result is single-quoted, as if the dollar sign had not -been present. - -@node Locale Translation -@subsubsection Locale-Specific Translation -@cindex localization -@cindex internationalization -@cindex native languages -@cindex translation, native languages - -A double-quoted string preceded by a dollar sign (@samp{$}) will cause -the string to be translated according to the current locale. -If the current locale is @code{C} or @code{POSIX}, the dollar sign -is ignored. -If the string is translated and replaced, the replacement is -double-quoted. - -@vindex LC_MESSAGES -@vindex TEXTDOMAIN -@vindex TEXTDOMAINDIR -Some systems use the message catalog selected by the @env{LC_MESSAGES} -shell variable. Others create the name of the message catalog from the -value of the @env{TEXTDOMAIN} shell variable, possibly adding a -suffix of @samp{.mo}. If you use the @env{TEXTDOMAIN} variable, you -may need to set the @env{TEXTDOMAINDIR} variable to the location of -the message catalog files. Still others use both variables in this -fashion: -@env{TEXTDOMAINDIR}/@env{LC_MESSAGES}/LC_MESSAGES/@env{TEXTDOMAIN}.mo. - -@node Comments -@subsection Comments -@cindex comments, shell - -In a non-interactive shell, or an interactive shell in which the -@code{interactive_comments} option to the @code{shopt} -builtin is enabled (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), -a word beginning with @samp{#} -causes that word and all remaining characters on that line to -be ignored. An interactive shell without the @code{interactive_comments} -option enabled does not allow comments. The @code{interactive_comments} -option is on by default in interactive shells. -@xref{Interactive Shells}, for a description of what makes -a shell interactive. - -@node Shell Commands -@section Shell Commands -@cindex commands, shell - -A simple shell command such as @code{echo a b c} consists of the command -itself followed by arguments, separated by spaces. - -More complex shell commands are composed of simple commands arranged together -in a variety of ways: in a pipeline in which the output of one command -becomes the input of a second, in a loop or conditional construct, or in -some other grouping. - -@menu -* Simple Commands:: The most common type of command. -* Pipelines:: Connecting the input and output of several - commands. -* Lists:: How to execute commands sequentially. -* Compound Commands:: Shell commands for control flow. -* Coprocesses:: Two-way communication between commands. -* GNU Parallel:: Running commands in parallel. -@end menu - -@node Simple Commands -@subsection Simple Commands -@cindex commands, simple - -A simple command is the kind of command encountered most often. -It's just a sequence of words separated by @code{blank}s, terminated -by one of the shell's control operators (@pxref{Definitions}). The -first word generally specifies a command to be executed, with the -rest of the words being that command's arguments. - -The return status (@pxref{Exit Status}) of a simple command is -its exit status as provided -by the @sc{posix} 1003.1 @code{waitpid} function, or 128+@var{n} if -the command was terminated by signal @var{n}. - -@node Pipelines -@subsection Pipelines -@cindex pipeline -@cindex commands, pipelines - -A @code{pipeline} is a sequence of simple commands separated by one of -the control operators @samp{|} or @samp{|&}. - -@rwindex time -@rwindex ! -@cindex command timing -The format for a pipeline is -@example -[time [-p]] [!] @var{command1} [ | or |& @var{command2} ] @dots{} -@end example - -@noindent -The output of each command in the pipeline is connected via a pipe -to the input of the next command. -That is, each command reads the previous command's output. This -connection is performed before any redirections specified by the -command. - -If @samp{|&} is used, @var{command1}'s standard error, in addition to -its standard output, is connected to -@var{command2}'s standard input through the pipe; -it is shorthand for @code{2>&1 |}. -This implicit redirection of the standard error to the standard output is -performed after any redirections specified by the command. - -The reserved word @code{time} causes timing statistics -to be printed for the pipeline once it finishes. -The statistics currently consist of elapsed (wall-clock) time and -user and system time consumed by the command's execution. -The @option{-p} option changes the output format to that specified -by @sc{posix}. -When the shell is in @sc{posix} mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}), -it does not recognize @code{time} as a reserved word if the next -token begins with a @samp{-}. -The @env{TIMEFORMAT} variable may be set to a format string that -specifies how the timing information should be displayed. -@xref{Bash Variables}, for a description of the available formats. -The use of @code{time} as a reserved word permits the timing of -shell builtins, shell functions, and pipelines. An external -@code{time} command cannot time these easily. - -When the shell is in @sc{posix} mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}), @code{time} -may be followed by a newline. In this case, the shell displays the -total user and system time consumed by the shell and its children. -The @env{TIMEFORMAT} variable may be used to specify the format of -the time information. - -If the pipeline is not executed asynchronously (@pxref{Lists}), the -shell waits for all commands in the pipeline to complete. - -Each command in a pipeline is executed in its own subshell -(@pxref{Command Execution Environment}). The exit -status of a pipeline is the exit status of the last command in the -pipeline, unless the @code{pipefail} option is enabled -(@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -If @code{pipefail} is enabled, the pipeline's return status is the -value of the last (rightmost) command to exit with a non-zero status, -or zero if all commands exit successfully. -If the reserved word @samp{!} precedes the pipeline, the -exit status is the logical negation of the exit status as described -above. -The shell waits for all commands in the pipeline to terminate before -returning a value. - -@node Lists -@subsection Lists of Commands -@cindex commands, lists - -A @code{list} is a sequence of one or more pipelines separated by one -of the operators @samp{;}, @samp{&}, @samp{&&}, or @samp{||}, -and optionally terminated by one of @samp{;}, @samp{&}, or a -@code{newline}. - -Of these list operators, @samp{&&} and @samp{||} -have equal precedence, followed by @samp{;} and @samp{&}, -which have equal precedence. - -A sequence of one or more newlines may appear in a @code{list} -to delimit commands, equivalent to a semicolon. - -If a command is terminated by the control operator @samp{&}, -the shell executes the command asynchronously in a subshell. -This is known as executing the command in the @var{background}. -The shell does not wait for the command to finish, and the return -status is 0 (true). -When job control is not active (@pxref{Job Control}), -the standard input for asynchronous commands, in the absence of any -explicit redirections, is redirected from @code{/dev/null}. - -Commands separated by a @samp{;} are executed sequentially; the shell -waits for each command to terminate in turn. The return status is the -exit status of the last command executed. - -@sc{and} and @sc{or} lists are sequences of one or more pipelines -separated by the control operators @samp{&&} and @samp{||}, -respectively. @sc{and} and @sc{or} lists are executed with left -associativity. - -An @sc{and} list has the form -@example -@var{command1} && @var{command2} -@end example - -@noindent -@var{command2} is executed if, and only if, @var{command1} -returns an exit status of zero. - -An @sc{or} list has the form -@example -@var{command1} || @var{command2} -@end example - -@noindent -@var{command2} is executed if, and only if, @var{command1} -returns a non-zero exit status. - -The return status of -@sc{and} and @sc{or} lists is the exit status of the last command -executed in the list. - -@node Compound Commands -@subsection Compound Commands -@cindex commands, compound - -@menu -* Looping Constructs:: Shell commands for iterative action. -* Conditional Constructs:: Shell commands for conditional execution. -* Command Grouping:: Ways to group commands. -@end menu - -Compound commands are the shell programming constructs. -Each construct begins with a reserved word or control operator and is -terminated by a corresponding reserved word or operator. -Any redirections (@pxref{Redirections}) associated with a compound command -apply to all commands within that compound command unless explicitly overridden. - -In most cases a list of commands in a compound command's description may be -separated from the rest of the command by one or more newlines, and may be -followed by a newline in place of a semicolon. - -Bash provides looping constructs, conditional commands, and mechanisms -to group commands and execute them as a unit. - -@node Looping Constructs -@subsubsection Looping Constructs -@cindex commands, looping - -Bash supports the following looping constructs. - -Note that wherever a @samp{;} appears in the description of a -command's syntax, it may be replaced with one or more newlines. - -@table @code -@item until -@rwindex until -@rwindex do -@rwindex done -The syntax of the @code{until} command is: - -@example -until @var{test-commands}; do @var{consequent-commands}; done -@end example - -Execute @var{consequent-commands} as long as -@var{test-commands} has an exit status which is not zero. -The return status is the exit status of the last command executed -in @var{consequent-commands}, or zero if none was executed. - -@item while -@rwindex while -The syntax of the @code{while} command is: - -@example -while @var{test-commands}; do @var{consequent-commands}; done -@end example - -Execute @var{consequent-commands} as long as -@var{test-commands} has an exit status of zero. -The return status is the exit status of the last command executed -in @var{consequent-commands}, or zero if none was executed. - -@item for -@rwindex for -The syntax of the @code{for} command is: - -@example -for @var{name} [ [in [@var{words} @dots{}] ] ; ] do @var{commands}; done -@end example - -Expand @var{words}, and execute @var{commands} once for each member -in the resultant list, with @var{name} bound to the current member. -If @samp{in @var{words}} is not present, the @code{for} command -executes the @var{commands} once for each positional parameter that is -set, as if @samp{in "$@@"} had been specified -(@pxref{Special Parameters}). -The return status is the exit status of the last command that executes. -If there are no items in the expansion of @var{words}, no commands are -executed, and the return status is zero. - -An alternate form of the @code{for} command is also supported: - -@example -for (( @var{expr1} ; @var{expr2} ; @var{expr3} )) ; do @var{commands} ; done -@end example - -First, the arithmetic expression @var{expr1} is evaluated according -to the rules described below (@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}). -The arithmetic expression @var{expr2} is then evaluated repeatedly -until it evaluates to zero. -Each time @var{expr2} evaluates to a non-zero value, @var{commands} are -executed and the arithmetic expression @var{expr3} is evaluated. -If any expression is omitted, it behaves as if it evaluates to 1. -The return value is the exit status of the last command in @var{commands} -that is executed, or false if any of the expressions is invalid. -@end table - -The @code{break} and @code{continue} builtins (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) -may be used to control loop execution. - -@node Conditional Constructs -@subsubsection Conditional Constructs -@cindex commands, conditional - -@table @code -@item if -@rwindex if -@rwindex then -@rwindex else -@rwindex elif -@rwindex fi -The syntax of the @code{if} command is: - -@example -if @var{test-commands}; then - @var{consequent-commands}; -[elif @var{more-test-commands}; then - @var{more-consequents};] -[else @var{alternate-consequents};] -fi -@end example - -The @var{test-commands} list is executed, and if its return status is zero, -the @var{consequent-commands} list is executed. -If @var{test-commands} returns a non-zero status, each @code{elif} list -is executed in turn, and if its exit status is zero, -the corresponding @var{more-consequents} is executed and the -command completes. -If @samp{else @var{alternate-consequents}} is present, and -the final command in the final @code{if} or @code{elif} clause -has a non-zero exit status, then @var{alternate-consequents} is executed. -The return status is the exit status of the last command executed, or -zero if no condition tested true. - -@item case -@rwindex case -@rwindex in -@rwindex esac -The syntax of the @code{case} command is: - -@example -case @var{word} in [ [(] @var{pattern} [| @var{pattern}]@dots{}) @var{command-list} ;;]@dots{} esac -@end example - -@code{case} will selectively execute the @var{command-list} corresponding to -the first @var{pattern} that matches @var{word}. -If the shell option @code{nocasematch} -(see the description of @code{shopt} in @ref{The Shopt Builtin}) -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -The @samp{|} is used to separate multiple patterns, and the @samp{)} -operator terminates a pattern list. -A list of patterns and an associated command-list is known -as a @var{clause}. - -Each clause must be terminated with @samp{;;}, @samp{;&}, or @samp{;;&}. -The @var{word} undergoes tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command -substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal before matching is -attempted. Each @var{pattern} undergoes tilde expansion, parameter -expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. - -There may be an arbitrary number of @code{case} clauses, each terminated -by a @samp{;;}, @samp{;&}, or @samp{;;&}. -The first pattern that matches determines the -command-list that is executed. -It's a common idiom to use @samp{*} as the final pattern to define the -default case, since that pattern will always match. - -Here is an example using @code{case} in a script that could be used to -describe one interesting feature of an animal: - -@example -echo -n "Enter the name of an animal: " -read ANIMAL -echo -n "The $ANIMAL has " -case $ANIMAL in - horse | dog | cat) echo -n "four";; - man | kangaroo ) echo -n "two";; - *) echo -n "an unknown number of";; -esac -echo " legs." -@end example - -@noindent - -If the @samp{;;} operator is used, no subsequent matches are attempted after -the first pattern match. -Using @samp{;&} in place of @samp{;;} causes execution to continue with -the @var{command-list} associated with the next clause, if any. -Using @samp{;;&} in place of @samp{;;} causes the shell to test the patterns -in the next clause, if any, and execute any associated @var{command-list} -on a successful match. - -The return status is zero if no @var{pattern} is matched. Otherwise, the -return status is the exit status of the @var{command-list} executed. - -@item select -@rwindex select - -The @code{select} construct allows the easy generation of menus. -It has almost the same syntax as the @code{for} command: - -@example -select @var{name} [in @var{words} @dots{}]; do @var{commands}; done -@end example - -The list of words following @code{in} is expanded, generating a list -of items. The set of expanded words is printed on the standard -error output stream, each preceded by a number. If the -@samp{in @var{words}} is omitted, the positional parameters are printed, -as if @samp{in "$@@"} had been specified. -The @env{PS3} prompt is then displayed and a line is read from the -standard input. -If the line consists of a number corresponding to one of the displayed -words, then the value of @var{name} is set to that word. -If the line is empty, the words and prompt are displayed again. -If @code{EOF} is read, the @code{select} command completes. -Any other value read causes @var{name} to be set to null. -The line read is saved in the variable @env{REPLY}. - -The @var{commands} are executed after each selection until a -@code{break} command is executed, at which -point the @code{select} command completes. - -Here is an example that allows the user to pick a filename from the -current directory, and displays the name and index of the file -selected. - -@example -select fname in *; -do - echo you picked $fname \($REPLY\) - break; -done -@end example - -@item ((@dots{})) -@example -(( @var{expression} )) -@end example - -The arithmetic @var{expression} is evaluated according to the rules -described below (@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}). -If the value of the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0; -otherwise the return status is 1. This is exactly equivalent to -@example -let "@var{expression}" -@end example -@noindent -@xref{Bash Builtins}, for a full description of the @code{let} builtin. - -@item [[@dots{}]] -@rwindex [[ -@rwindex ]] -@example -[[ @var{expression} ]] -@end example - -Return a status of 0 or 1 depending on the evaluation of -the conditional expression @var{expression}. -Expressions are composed of the primaries described below in -@ref{Bash Conditional Expressions}. -Word splitting and filename expansion are not performed on the words -between the @code{[[} and @code{]]}; tilde expansion, parameter and -variable expansion, arithmetic expansion, command substitution, process -substitution, and quote removal are performed. -Conditional operators such as @samp{-f} must be unquoted to be recognized -as primaries. - -When used with @code{[[}, the @samp{<} and @samp{>} operators sort -lexicographically using the current locale. - -When the @samp{==} and @samp{!=} operators are used, the string to the -right of the operator is considered a pattern and matched according -to the rules described below in @ref{Pattern Matching}. -The @samp{=} operator is identical to @samp{==}. -If the shell option @code{nocasematch} -(see the description of @code{shopt} in @ref{The Shopt Builtin}) -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -The return value is 0 if the string matches (@samp{==}) or does not -match (@samp{!=})the pattern, and 1 otherwise. -Any part of the pattern may be quoted to force the quoted portion -to be matched as a string. - -An additional binary operator, @samp{=~}, is available, with the same -precedence as @samp{==} and @samp{!=}. -When it is used, the string to the right of the operator is considered -an extended regular expression and matched accordingly (as in @i{regex}3)). -The return value is 0 if the string matches -the pattern, and 1 otherwise. -If the regular expression is syntactically incorrect, the conditional -expression's return value is 2. -If the shell option @code{nocasematch} -(see the description of @code{shopt} in @ref{The Shopt Builtin}) -is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case -of alphabetic characters. -Any part of the pattern may be quoted to force the quoted portion -to be matched as a string. -Bracket expressions in regular expressions must be treated carefully, -since normal quoting characters lose their meanings between brackets. -If the pattern is stored in a shell variable, quoting the variable -expansion forces the entire pattern to be matched as a string. -Substrings matched by parenthesized subexpressions within the regular -expression are saved in the array variable @code{BASH_REMATCH}. -The element of @code{BASH_REMATCH} with index 0 is the portion of the string -matching the entire regular expression. -The element of @code{BASH_REMATCH} with index @var{n} is the portion of the -string matching the @var{n}th parenthesized subexpression. - -For example, the following will match a line -(stored in the shell variable @var{line}) -if there is a sequence of characters in the value consisting of -any number, including zero, of -space characters, zero or one instances of @samp{a}, then a @samp{b}: -@example -[[ $line =~ [[:space:]]*(a)?b ]] -@end example - -@noindent -That means values like @samp{aab} and @samp{ aaaaaab} will match, as -will a line containing a @samp{b} anywhere in its value. - -Storing the regular expression in a shell variable is often a useful -way to avoid problems with quoting characters that are special to the -shell. -It is sometimes difficult to specify a regular expression literally -without using quotes, or to keep track of the quoting used by regular -expressions while paying attention to the shell's quote removal. -Using a shell variable to store the pattern decreases these problems. -For example, the following is equivalent to the above: -@example -pattern='[[:space:]]*(a)?b' -[[ $line =~ $pattern ]] -@end example - -@noindent -If you want to match a character that's special to the regular expression -grammar, it has to be quoted to remove its special meaning. -This means that in the pattern @samp{xxx.txt}, the @samp{.} matches any -character in the string (its usual regular expression meaning), but in the -pattern @samp{"xxx.txt"} it can only match a literal @samp{.}. -Shell programmers should take special care with backslashes, since backslashes -are used both by the shell and regular expressions to remove the special -meaning from the following character. -The following two sets of commands are @emph{not} equivalent: -@example -pattern='\.' - -[[ . =~ $pattern ]] -[[ . =~ \. ]] - -[[ . =~ "$pattern" ]] -[[ . =~ '\.' ]] -@end example - -@noindent -The first two matches will succeed, but the second two will not, because -in the second two the backslash will be part of the pattern to be matched. -In the first two examples, the backslash removes the special meaning from -@samp{.}, so the literal @samp{.} matches. -If the string in the first examples were anything other than @samp{.}, say -@samp{a}, the pattern would not match, because the quoted @samp{.} in the -pattern loses its special meaning of matching any single character. - -Expressions may be combined using the following operators, listed -in decreasing order of precedence: - -@table @code -@item ( @var{expression} ) -Returns the value of @var{expression}. -This may be used to override the normal precedence of operators. - -@item ! @var{expression} -True if @var{expression} is false. - -@item @var{expression1} && @var{expression2} -True if both @var{expression1} and @var{expression2} are true. - -@item @var{expression1} || @var{expression2} -True if either @var{expression1} or @var{expression2} is true. -@end table - -@noindent -The @code{&&} and @code{||} operators do not evaluate @var{expression2} if the -value of @var{expression1} is sufficient to determine the return -value of the entire conditional expression. -@end table - -@node Command Grouping -@subsubsection Grouping Commands -@cindex commands, grouping - -Bash provides two ways to group a list of commands to be executed -as a unit. When commands are grouped, redirections may be applied -to the entire command list. For example, the output of all the -commands in the list may be redirected to a single stream. - -@table @code -@item () -@example -( @var{list} ) -@end example - -Placing a list of commands between parentheses causes a subshell -environment to be created (@pxref{Command Execution Environment}), and each -of the commands in @var{list} to be executed in that subshell. Since the -@var{list} is executed in a subshell, variable assignments do not remain in -effect after the subshell completes. - -@item @{@} -@rwindex @{ -@rwindex @} -@example -@{ @var{list}; @} -@end example - -Placing a list of commands between curly braces causes the list to -be executed in the current shell context. No subshell is created. -The semicolon (or newline) following @var{list} is required. -@end table - -In addition to the creation of a subshell, there is a subtle difference -between these two constructs due to historical reasons. The braces -are @code{reserved words}, so they must be separated from the @var{list} -by @code{blank}s or other shell metacharacters. -The parentheses are @code{operators}, and are -recognized as separate tokens by the shell even if they are not separated -from the @var{list} by whitespace. - -The exit status of both of these constructs is the exit status of -@var{list}. - -@node Coprocesses -@subsection Coprocesses -@cindex coprocess - -A @code{coprocess} is a shell command preceded by the @code{coproc} -reserved word. -A coprocess is executed asynchronously in a subshell, as if the command -had been terminated with the @samp{&} control operator, with a two-way pipe -established between the executing shell and the coprocess. - -The format for a coprocess is: -@example -coproc [@var{NAME}] @var{command} [@var{redirections}] -@end example - -@noindent -This creates a coprocess named @var{NAME}. -If @var{NAME} is not supplied, the default name is @var{COPROC}. -@var{NAME} must not be supplied if @var{command} is a simple -command (@pxref{Simple Commands}); otherwise, it is interpreted as -the first word of the simple command. - -When the coprocess is executed, the shell creates an array variable -(@pxref{Arrays}) -named @env{NAME} in the context of the executing shell. -The standard output of @var{command} -is connected via a pipe to a file descriptor in the executing shell, -and that file descriptor is assigned to @env{NAME}[0]. -The standard input of @var{command} -is connected via a pipe to a file descriptor in the executing shell, -and that file descriptor is assigned to @env{NAME}[1]. -This pipe is established before any redirections specified by the -command (@pxref{Redirections}). -The file descriptors can be utilized as arguments to shell commands -and redirections using standard word expansions. -The file descriptors are not available in subshells. - -The process ID of the shell spawned to execute the coprocess is -available as the value of the variable @env{NAME}_PID. -The @code{wait} -builtin command may be used to wait for the coprocess to terminate. - -Since the coprocess is created as an asynchronous command, -the @code{coproc} command always returns success. -The return status of a coprocess is the exit status of @var{command}. - -@node GNU Parallel -@subsection GNU Parallel - -There are ways to run commands in parallel that are not built into Bash. -GNU Parallel is a tool to do just that. - -GNU Parallel, as its name suggests, can be used to build and run commands -in parallel. You may run the same command with different arguments, whether -they are filenames, usernames, hostnames, or lines read from files. GNU -Parallel provides shorthand references to many of the most common operations -(input lines, various portions of the input line, different ways to specify -the input source, and so on). Parallel can replace @code{xargs} or feed -commands from its input sources to several different instances of Bash. - -For a complete description, refer to the GNU Parallel documentation. A few -examples should provide a brief introduction to its use. - -For example, it is easy to replace @code{xargs} to gzip all html files in the -current directory and its subdirectories: -@example -find . -type f -name '*.html' -print | parallel gzip -@end example -@noindent -If you need to protect special characters such as newlines in file names, -use find's @option{-print0} option and parallel's @option{-0} option. - -You can use Parallel to move files from the current directory when the -number of files is too large to process with one @code{mv} invocation: -@example -ls | parallel mv @{@} destdir -@end example - -As you can see, the @{@} is replaced with each line read from standard input. -While using @code{ls} will work in most instances, it is not sufficient to -deal with all filenames. -If you need to accommodate special characters in filenames, you can use - -@example -find . -depth 1 \! -name '.*' -print0 | parallel -0 mv @{@} destdir -@end example - -@noindent -as alluded to above. - -This will run as many @code{mv} commands as there are files in the current -directory. -You can emulate a parallel @code{xargs} by adding the @option{-X} option: -@example -find . -depth 1 \! -name '.*' -print0 | parallel -0 -X mv @{@} destdir -@end example - -GNU Parallel can replace certain common idioms that operate on lines read -from a file (in this case, filenames listed one per line): -@example - while IFS= read -r x; do - do-something1 "$x" "config-$x" - do-something2 < "$x" - done < file | process-output -@end example - -@noindent -with a more compact syntax reminiscent of lambdas: -@example -cat list | parallel "do-something1 @{@} config-@{@} ; do-something2 < @{@}" | process-output -@end example - -Parallel provides a built-in mechanism to remove filename extensions, which -lends itself to batch file transformations or renaming: -@example -ls *.gz | parallel -j+0 "zcat @{@} | bzip2 >@{.@}.bz2 && rm @{@}" -@end example -@noindent -This will recompress all files in the current directory with names ending -in .gz using bzip2, running one job per CPU (-j+0) in parallel. -(We use @code{ls} for brevity here; using @code{find} as above is more -robust in the face of filenames containing unexpected characters.) -Parallel can take arguments from the command line; the above can also be -written as - -@example -parallel "zcat @{@} | bzip2 >@{.@}.bz2 && rm @{@}" ::: *.gz -@end example - -If a command generates output, you may want to preserve the input order in -the output. For instance, the following command -@example -@{ echo foss.org.my ; echo debian.org; echo freenetproject.org; @} | parallel traceroute -@end example -@noindent -will display as output the traceroute invocation that finishes first. -Adding the @option{-k} option -@example -@{ echo foss.org.my ; echo debian.org; echo freenetproject.org; @} | parallel -k traceroute -@end example -@noindent -will ensure that the output of @code{traceroute foss.org.my} is displayed first. - -Finally, Parallel can be used to run a sequence of shell commands in parallel, -similar to @samp{cat file | bash}. -It is not uncommon to take a list of filenames, create a series of shell -commands to operate on them, and feed that list of commnds to a shell. -Parallel can speed this up. Assuming that @file{file} contains a list of -shell commands, one per line, - -@example -parallel -j 10 < file -@end example - -@noindent -will evaluate the commands using the shell (since no explicit command is -supplied as an argument), in blocks of ten shell jobs at a time. - -@node Shell Functions -@section Shell Functions -@cindex shell function -@cindex functions, shell - -Shell functions are a way to group commands for later execution -using a single name for the group. They are executed just like -a "regular" command. -When the name of a shell function is used as a simple command name, -the list of commands associated with that function name is executed. -Shell functions are executed in the current -shell context; no new process is created to interpret them. - -Functions are declared using this syntax: -@rwindex function -@example -@var{name} () @var{compound-command} [ @var{redirections} ] -@end example - -or - -@example -function @var{name} [()] @var{compound-command} [ @var{redirections} ] -@end example - -This defines a shell function named @var{name}. The reserved -word @code{function} is optional. -If the @code{function} reserved -word is supplied, the parentheses are optional. -The @var{body} of the function is the compound command -@var{compound-command} (@pxref{Compound Commands}). -That command is usually a @var{list} enclosed between @{ and @}, but -may be any compound command listed above. -@var{compound-command} is executed whenever @var{name} is specified as the -name of a command. -When the shell is in @sc{posix} mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}), -@var{name} may not be the same as one of the special builtins -(@pxref{Special Builtins}). -Any redirections (@pxref{Redirections}) associated with the shell function -are performed when the function is executed. - -A function definition may be deleted using the @option{-f} option to the -@code{unset} builtin (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -The exit status of a function definition is zero unless a syntax error -occurs or a readonly function with the same name already exists. -When executed, the exit status of a function is the exit status of the -last command executed in the body. - -Note that for historical reasons, in the most common usage the curly braces -that surround the body of the function must be separated from the body by -@code{blank}s or newlines. -This is because the braces are reserved words and are only recognized -as such when they are separated from the command list -by whitespace or another shell metacharacter. -Also, when using the braces, the @var{list} must be terminated by a semicolon, -a @samp{&}, or a newline. - -When a function is executed, the arguments to the -function become the positional parameters -during its execution (@pxref{Positional Parameters}). -The special parameter @samp{#} that expands to the number of -positional parameters is updated to reflect the change. -Special parameter @code{0} is unchanged. -The first element of the @env{FUNCNAME} variable is set to the -name of the function while the function is executing. - -All other aspects of the shell execution -environment are identical between a function and its caller -with these exceptions: -the @env{DEBUG} and @env{RETURN} traps -are not inherited unless the function has been given the -@code{trace} attribute using the @code{declare} builtin or -the @code{-o functrace} option has been enabled with -the @code{set} builtin, -(in which case all functions inherit the @env{DEBUG} and @env{RETURN} traps), -and the @env{ERR} trap is not inherited unless the @code{-o errtrace} -shell option has been enabled. -@xref{Bourne Shell Builtins}, for the description of the -@code{trap} builtin. - -The @env{FUNCNEST} variable, if set to a numeric value greater -than 0, defines a maximum function nesting level. Function -invocations that exceed the limit cause the entire command to -abort. - -If the builtin command @code{return} -is executed in a function, the function completes and -execution resumes with the next command after the function -call. -Any command associated with the @code{RETURN} trap is executed -before execution resumes. -When a function completes, the values of the -positional parameters and the special parameter @samp{#} -are restored to the values they had prior to the function's -execution. If a numeric argument is given to @code{return}, -that is the function's return status; otherwise the function's -return status is the exit status of the last command executed -before the @code{return}. - -Variables local to the function may be declared with the -@code{local} builtin. These variables are visible only to -the function and the commands it invokes. - -Function names and definitions may be listed with the -@option{-f} option to the @code{declare} (@code{typeset}) -builtin command (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). -The @option{-F} option to @code{declare} or @code{typeset} -will list the function names only -(and optionally the source file and line number, if the @code{extdebug} -shell option is enabled). -Functions may be exported so that subshells -automatically have them defined with the -@option{-f} option to the @code{export} builtin -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). -Note that shell functions and variables with the same name may result -in multiple identically-named entries in the environment passed to the -shell's children. -Care should be taken in cases where this may cause a problem. - -Functions may be recursive. -The @code{FUNCNEST} variable may be used to limit the depth of the -function call stack and restrict the number of function invocations. -By default, no limit is placed on the number of recursive calls. - -@node Shell Parameters -@section Shell Parameters -@cindex parameters -@cindex variable, shell -@cindex shell variable - -@menu -* Positional Parameters:: The shell's command-line arguments. -* Special Parameters:: Parameters denoted by special characters. -@end menu - -A @var{parameter} is an entity that stores values. -It can be a @code{name}, a number, or one of the special characters -listed below. -A @var{variable} is a parameter denoted by a @code{name}. -A variable has a @var{value} and zero or more @var{attributes}. -Attributes are assigned using the @code{declare} builtin command -(see the description of the @code{declare} builtin in @ref{Bash Builtins}). - -A parameter is set if it has been assigned a value. The null string is -a valid value. Once a variable is set, it may be unset only by using -the @code{unset} builtin command. - -A variable may be assigned to by a statement of the form -@example -@var{name}=[@var{value}] -@end example -@noindent -If @var{value} -is not given, the variable is assigned the null string. All -@var{value}s undergo tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote -removal (detailed below). If the variable has its @code{integer} -attribute set, then @var{value} -is evaluated as an arithmetic expression even if the @code{$((@dots{}))} -expansion is not used (@pxref{Arithmetic Expansion}). -Word splitting is not performed, with the exception -of @code{"$@@"} as explained below. -Filename expansion is not performed. -Assignment statements may also appear as arguments to the -@code{alias}, -@code{declare}, @code{typeset}, @code{export}, @code{readonly}, -and @code{local} builtin commands. -When in @sc{posix} mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}), these builtins may appear -in a command after one or more instances of the @code{command} builtin -and retain these assignment statement properties. - -In the context where an assignment statement is assigning a value -to a shell variable or array index (@pxref{Arrays}), the @samp{+=} -operator can be used to -append to or add to the variable's previous value. -When @samp{+=} is applied to a variable for which the @var{integer} attribute -has been set, @var{value} is evaluated as an arithmetic expression and -added to the variable's current value, which is also evaluated. -When @samp{+=} is applied to an array variable using compound assignment -(@pxref{Arrays}), the -variable's value is not unset (as it is when using @samp{=}), and new -values are appended to the array beginning at one greater than the array's -maximum index (for indexed arrays), or added as additional key-value pairs -in an associative array. -When applied to a string-valued variable, @var{value} is expanded and -appended to the variable's value. - -A variable can be assigned the @var{nameref} attribute using the -@option{-n} option to the \fBdeclare\fP or \fBlocal\fP builtin commands -(@pxref{Bash Builtins}) -to create a @var{nameref}, or a reference to another variable. -This allows variables to be manipulated indirectly. -Whenever the nameref variable is referenced or assigned to, the operation -is actually performed on the variable specified by the nameref variable's -value. -A nameref is commonly used within shell functions to refer to a variable -whose name is passed as an argument to the function. -For instance, if a variable name is passed to a shell function as its first -argument, running -@example -declare -n ref=$1 -@end example -@noindent -inside the function creates a nameref variable @var{ref} whose value is -the variable name passed as the first argument. -References and assignments to @var{ref} are treated as references and -assignments to the variable whose name was passed as @code{$1}. - -If the control variable in a @code{for} loop has the nameref attribute, -the list of words can be a list of shell variables, and a name reference -will be established for each word in the list, in turn, when the loop is -executed. -Array variables cannot be given the @option{-n} attribute. -However, nameref variables can reference array variables and subscripted -array variables. -Namerefs can be unset using the @option{-n} option to the @code{unset} builtin -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). -Otherwise, if @code{unset} is executed with the name of a nameref variable -as an argument, the variable referenced by the nameref variable will be unset. - -@node Positional Parameters -@subsection Positional Parameters -@cindex parameters, positional - -A @var{positional parameter} is a parameter denoted by one or more -digits, other than the single digit @code{0}. Positional parameters are -assigned from the shell's arguments when it is invoked, -and may be reassigned using the @code{set} builtin command. -Positional parameter @code{N} may be referenced as @code{$@{N@}}, or -as @code{$N} when @code{N} consists of a single digit. -Positional parameters may not be assigned to with assignment statements. -The @code{set} and @code{shift} builtins are used to set and -unset them (@pxref{Shell Builtin Commands}). -The positional parameters are -temporarily replaced when a shell function is executed -(@pxref{Shell Functions}). - -When a positional parameter consisting of more than a single -digit is expanded, it must be enclosed in braces. - -@node Special Parameters -@subsection Special Parameters -@cindex parameters, special - -The shell treats several parameters specially. These parameters may -only be referenced; assignment to them is not allowed. - -@vtable @code - -@item * -Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one. When the -expansion occurs within double quotes, it expands to a single word -with the value of each parameter separated by the first character -of the @env{IFS} -special variable. That is, @code{"$*"} is equivalent -to @code{"$1@var{c}$2@var{c}@dots{}"}, where @var{c} -is the first character of the value of the @code{IFS} -variable. -If @env{IFS} is unset, the parameters are separated by spaces. -If @env{IFS} is null, the parameters are joined without intervening -separators. - - -@item @@ -Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one. When the -expansion occurs within double quotes, each parameter expands to a -separate word. That is, @code{"$@@"} is equivalent to -@code{"$1" "$2" @dots{}}. -If the double-quoted expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of -the first parameter is joined with the beginning part of the original -word, and the expansion of the last parameter is joined with the last -part of the original word. -When there are no positional parameters, @code{"$@@"} and -@code{$@@} -expand to nothing (i.e., they are removed). - -@item # -Expands to the number of positional parameters in decimal. - -@item ? -Expands to the exit status of the most recently executed foreground -pipeline. - -@item - -(A hyphen.) Expands to the current option flags as specified upon -invocation, by the @code{set} -builtin command, or those set by the shell itself -(such as the @option{-i} option). - -@item $ -Expands to the process @sc{id} of the shell. In a @code{()} subshell, it -expands to the process @sc{id} of the invoking shell, not the subshell. - -@item ! -Expands to the process @sc{id} of the job most recently placed into the -background, whether executed as an asynchronous command or using -the @code{bg} builtin (@pxref{Job Control Builtins}). - -@item 0 -Expands to the name of the shell or shell script. This is set at -shell initialization. If Bash is invoked with a file of commands -(@pxref{Shell Scripts}), @code{$0} is set to the name of that file. -If Bash is started with the @option{-c} option (@pxref{Invoking Bash}), -then @code{$0} is set to the first argument after the string to be -executed, if one is present. Otherwise, it is set -to the filename used to invoke Bash, as given by argument zero. - -@item _ -(An underscore.) -At shell startup, set to the absolute pathname used to invoke the -shell or shell script being executed as passed in the environment -or argument list. -Subsequently, expands to the last argument to the previous command, -after expansion. -Also set to the full pathname used to invoke each command executed -and placed in the environment exported to that command. -When checking mail, this parameter holds the name of the mail file. -@end vtable - -@node Shell Expansions -@section Shell Expansions -@cindex expansion - -Expansion is performed on the command line after it has been split into -@code{token}s. There are seven kinds of expansion performed: - -@itemize @bullet -@item brace expansion -@item tilde expansion -@item parameter and variable expansion -@item command substitution -@item arithmetic expansion -@item word splitting -@item filename expansion -@end itemize - -@menu -* Brace Expansion:: Expansion of expressions within braces. -* Tilde Expansion:: Expansion of the ~ character. -* Shell Parameter Expansion:: How Bash expands variables to their values. -* Command Substitution:: Using the output of a command as an argument. -* Arithmetic Expansion:: How to use arithmetic in shell expansions. -* Process Substitution:: A way to write and read to and from a - command. -* Word Splitting:: How the results of expansion are split into separate - arguments. -* Filename Expansion:: A shorthand for specifying filenames matching patterns. -* Quote Removal:: How and when quote characters are removed from - words. -@end menu - -The order of expansions is: brace expansion, tilde expansion, -parameter, variable, and arithmetic expansion and -command substitution -(done in a left-to-right fashion), word splitting, and filename -expansion. - -On systems that can support it, there is an additional expansion -available: @var{process substitution}. This is performed at the -same time as parameter, variable, and arithmetic expansion and -command substitution. - -Only brace expansion, word splitting, and filename expansion -can change the number of words of the expansion; other expansions -expand a single word to a single word. -The only exceptions to this are the expansions of -@code{"$@@"} (@pxref{Special Parameters}) and @code{"$@{@var{name}[@@]@}"} -(@pxref{Arrays}). - -After all expansions, @code{quote removal} (@pxref{Quote Removal}) -is performed. - -@node Brace Expansion -@subsection Brace Expansion -@cindex brace expansion -@cindex expansion, brace - -Brace expansion is a mechanism by which arbitrary strings may be generated. -This mechanism is similar to -@var{filename expansion} (@pxref{Filename Expansion}), -but the filenames generated need not exist. -Patterns to be brace expanded take the form of an optional @var{preamble}, -followed by either a series of comma-separated strings or a sequence expression -between a pair of braces, -followed by an optional @var{postscript}. -The preamble is prefixed to each string contained within the braces, and -the postscript is then appended to each resulting string, expanding left -to right. - -Brace expansions may be nested. -The results of each expanded string are not sorted; left to right order -is preserved. -For example, -@example -bash$ echo a@{d,c,b@}e -ade ace abe -@end example - -A sequence expression takes the form @code{@{@var{x}..@var{y}[..@var{incr}]@}}, -where @var{x} and @var{y} are either integers or single characters, -and @var{incr}, an optional increment, is an integer. -When integers are supplied, the expression expands to each number between -@var{x} and @var{y}, inclusive. -Supplied integers may be prefixed with @samp{0} to force each term to have the -same width. -When either @var{x} or @var{y} begins with a zero, the shell -attempts to force all generated terms to contain the same number of digits, -zero-padding where necessary. -When characters are supplied, the expression expands to each character -lexicographically between @var{x} and @var{y}, inclusive, -using the default C locale. -Note that both @var{x} and @var{y} must be of the same type. -When the increment is supplied, it is used as the difference between -each term. The default increment is 1 or -1 as appropriate. - -Brace expansion is performed before any other expansions, -and any characters special to other expansions are preserved -in the result. It is strictly textual. Bash -does not apply any syntactic interpretation to the context of the -expansion or the text between the braces. -To avoid conflicts with parameter expansion, the string @samp{$@{} -is not considered eligible for brace expansion. - -A correctly-formed brace expansion must contain unquoted opening -and closing braces, and at least one unquoted comma or a valid -sequence expression. -Any incorrectly formed brace expansion is left unchanged. - -A @{ or @samp{,} may be quoted with a backslash to prevent its -being considered part of a brace expression. -To avoid conflicts with parameter expansion, the string @samp{$@{} -is not considered eligible for brace expansion. - -This construct is typically used as shorthand when the common -prefix of the strings to be generated is longer than in the -above example: -@example -mkdir /usr/local/src/bash/@{old,new,dist,bugs@} -@end example -or -@example -chown root /usr/@{ucb/@{ex,edit@},lib/@{ex?.?*,how_ex@}@} -@end example - -@node Tilde Expansion -@subsection Tilde Expansion -@cindex tilde expansion -@cindex expansion, tilde - -If a word begins with an unquoted tilde character (@samp{~}), all of the -characters up to the first unquoted slash (or all characters, -if there is no unquoted slash) are considered a @var{tilde-prefix}. -If none of the characters in the tilde-prefix are quoted, the -characters in the tilde-prefix following the tilde are treated as a -possible @var{login name}. -If this login name is the null string, the tilde is replaced with the -value of the @env{HOME} shell variable. -If @env{HOME} is unset, the home directory of the user executing the -shell is substituted instead. -Otherwise, the tilde-prefix is replaced with the home directory -associated with the specified login name. - -If the tilde-prefix is @samp{~+}, the value of -the shell variable @env{PWD} replaces the tilde-prefix. -If the tilde-prefix is @samp{~-}, the value of the shell variable -@env{OLDPWD}, if it is set, is substituted. - -If the characters following the tilde in the tilde-prefix consist of a -number @var{N}, optionally prefixed by a @samp{+} or a @samp{-}, -the tilde-prefix is replaced with the -corresponding element from the directory stack, as it would be displayed -by the @code{dirs} builtin invoked with the characters following tilde -in the tilde-prefix as an argument (@pxref{The Directory Stack}). -If the tilde-prefix, sans the tilde, consists of a number without a -leading @samp{+} or @samp{-}, @samp{+} is assumed. - -If the login name is invalid, or the tilde expansion fails, the word is -left unchanged. - -Each variable assignment is checked for unquoted tilde-prefixes immediately -following a @samp{:} or the first @samp{=}. -In these cases, tilde expansion is also performed. -Consequently, one may use filenames with tildes in assignments to -@env{PATH}, @env{MAILPATH}, and @env{CDPATH}, -and the shell assigns the expanded value. - -The following table shows how Bash treats unquoted tilde-prefixes: - -@table @code -@item ~ -The value of @code{$HOME} -@item ~/foo -@file{$HOME/foo} - -@item ~fred/foo -The subdirectory @code{foo} of the home directory of the user -@code{fred} - -@item ~+/foo -@file{$PWD/foo} - -@item ~-/foo -@file{$@{OLDPWD-'~-'@}/foo} - -@item ~@var{N} -The string that would be displayed by @samp{dirs +@var{N}} - -@item ~+@var{N} -The string that would be displayed by @samp{dirs +@var{N}} - -@item ~-@var{N} -The string that would be displayed by @samp{dirs -@var{N}} -@end table - -@node Shell Parameter Expansion -@subsection Shell Parameter Expansion -@cindex parameter expansion -@cindex expansion, parameter - -The @samp{$} character introduces parameter expansion, -command substitution, or arithmetic expansion. The parameter name -or symbol to be expanded may be enclosed in braces, which -are optional but serve to protect the variable to be expanded from -characters immediately following it which could be -interpreted as part of the name. - -When braces are used, the matching ending brace is the first @samp{@}} -not escaped by a backslash or within a quoted string, and not within an -embedded arithmetic expansion, command substitution, or parameter -expansion. - -The basic form of parameter expansion is $@{@var{parameter}@}. -The value of @var{parameter} is substituted. -The @var{parameter} is a shell parameter as described above -(@pxref{Shell Parameters}) or an array reference (@pxref{Arrays}). -The braces are required when @var{parameter} -is a positional parameter with more than one digit, -or when @var{parameter} is followed by a character that is not to be -interpreted as part of its name. - -If the first character of @var{parameter} is an exclamation point (!), -it introduces a level of variable indirection. -Bash uses the value of the variable formed from the rest of -@var{parameter} as the name of the variable; this variable is then -expanded and that value is used in the rest of the substitution, rather -than the value of @var{parameter} itself. -This is known as @code{indirect expansion}. -The exceptions to this are the expansions of $@{!@var{prefix}*@} -and $@{!@var{name}[@@]@} -described below. -The exclamation point must immediately follow the left brace in order to -introduce indirection. - -In each of the cases below, @var{word} is subject to tilde expansion, -parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion. - -When not performing substring expansion, using the form described -below (e.g., @samp{:-}), Bash tests for a parameter that is unset or null. -Omitting the colon results in a test only for a parameter that is unset. -Put another way, if the colon is included, -the operator tests for both @var{parameter}'s existence and that its value -is not null; if the colon is omitted, the operator tests only for existence. - -@table @code - -@item $@{@var{parameter}:@minus{}@var{word}@} -If @var{parameter} is unset or null, the expansion of -@var{word} is substituted. Otherwise, the value of -@var{parameter} is substituted. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}:=@var{word}@} -If @var{parameter} -is unset or null, the expansion of @var{word} -is assigned to @var{parameter}. -The value of @var{parameter} is then substituted. -Positional parameters and special parameters may not be assigned to -in this way. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}:?@var{word}@} -If @var{parameter} -is null or unset, the expansion of @var{word} (or a message -to that effect if @var{word} -is not present) is written to the standard error and the shell, if it -is not interactive, exits. Otherwise, the value of @var{parameter} is -substituted. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}:+@var{word}@} -If @var{parameter} -is null or unset, nothing is substituted, otherwise the expansion of -@var{word} is substituted. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}:@var{offset}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter}:@var{offset}:@var{length}@} -This is referred to as Substring Expansion. -It expands to up to @var{length} characters of the value of @var{parameter} -starting at the character specified by @var{offset}. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@}, an indexed array subscripted by -@samp{@@} or @samp{*}, or an associative array name, the results differ as -described below. -If @var{length} is omitted, it expands to the substring of the value of -@var{parameter} starting at the character specified by @var{offset} -and extending to the end of the value. -@var{length} and @var{offset} are arithmetic expressions -(@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}). - -If @var{offset} evaluates to a number less than zero, the value -is used as an offset in characters -from the end of the value of @var{parameter}. -If @var{length} evaluates to a number less than zero, -it is interpreted as an offset in characters -from the end of the value of @var{parameter} rather than -a number of characters, and the expansion is the characters between -@var{offset} and that result. -Note that a negative offset must be separated from the colon by at least -one space to avoid being confused with the @samp{:-} expansion. - -Here are some examples illustrating substring expansion on parameters and -subscripted arrays: - -@verbatim -$ string=01234567890abcdefgh -$ echo ${string:7} -7890abcdefgh -$ echo ${string:7:0} - -$ echo ${string:7:2} -78 -$ echo ${string:7:-2} -7890abcdef -$ echo ${string: -7} -bcdefgh -$ echo ${string: -7:0} - -$ echo ${string: -7:2} -bc -$ echo ${string: -7:-2} -bcdef -$ set -- 01234567890abcdefgh -$ echo ${1:7} -7890abcdefgh -$ echo ${1:7:0} - -$ echo ${1:7:2} -78 -$ echo ${1:7:-2} -7890abcdef -$ echo ${1: -7} -bcdefgh -$ echo ${1: -7:0} - -$ echo ${1: -7:2} -bc -$ echo ${1: -7:-2} -bcdef -$ array[0]=01234567890abcdefgh -$ echo ${array[0]:7} -7890abcdefgh -$ echo ${array[0]:7:0} - -$ echo ${array[0]:7:2} -78 -$ echo ${array[0]:7:-2} -7890abcdef -$ echo ${array[0]: -7} -bcdefgh -$ echo ${array[0]: -7:0} - -$ echo ${array[0]: -7:2} -bc -$ echo ${array[0]: -7:-2} -bcdef -@end verbatim - -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@}, the result is @var{length} positional -parameters beginning at @var{offset}. -A negative @var{offset} is taken relative to one greater than the greatest -positional parameter, so an offset of -1 evaluates to the last positional -parameter. -It is an expansion error if @var{length} evaluates to a number less than zero. - -The following examples illustrate substring expansion using positional -parameters: - -@verbatim -$ set -- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h -$ echo ${@:7} -7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h -$ echo ${@:7:0} - -$ echo ${@:7:2} -7 8 -$ echo ${@:7:-2} -bash: -2: substring expression < 0 -$ echo ${@: -7:2} -b c -$ echo ${@:0} -./bash 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h -$ echo ${@:0:2} -./bash 1 -$ echo ${@: -7:0} - -@end verbatim - -If @var{parameter} is an indexed array name subscripted -by @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, the result is the @var{length} -members of the array beginning with @code{$@{@var{parameter}[@var{offset}]@}}. -A negative @var{offset} is taken relative to one greater than the maximum -index of the specified array. -It is an expansion error if @var{length} evaluates to a number less than zero. - -These examples show how you can use substring expansion with indexed -arrays: - -@verbatim -$ array=(0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h) -$ echo ${array[@]:7} -7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h -$ echo ${array[@]:7:2} -7 8 -$ echo ${array[@]: -7:2} -b c -$ echo ${array[@]: -7:-2} -bash: -2: substring expression < 0 -$ echo ${array[@]:0} -0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 a b c d e f g h -$ echo ${array[@]:0:2} -0 1 -$ echo ${array[@]: -7:0} - -@end verbatim - -Substring expansion applied to an associative array produces undefined -results. - -Substring indexing is zero-based unless the positional parameters -are used, in which case the indexing starts at 1 by default. -If @var{offset} is 0, and the positional parameters are used, @code{$@@} is -prefixed to the list. - -@item $@{!@var{prefix}*@} -@itemx $@{!@var{prefix}@@@} -Expands to the names of variables whose names begin with @var{prefix}, -separated by the first character of the @env{IFS} special variable. -When @samp{@@} is used and the expansion appears within double quotes, each -variable name expands to a separate word. - -@item $@{!@var{name}[@@]@} -@itemx $@{!@var{name}[*]@} -If @var{name} is an array variable, expands to the list of array indices -(keys) assigned in @var{name}. -If @var{name} is not an array, expands to 0 if @var{name} is set and null -otherwise. -When @samp{@@} is used and the expansion appears within double quotes, each -key expands to a separate word. - -@item $@{#@var{parameter}@} -The length in characters of the expanded value of @var{parameter} is -substituted. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{*} or @samp{@@}, the value substituted -is the number of positional parameters. -If @var{parameter} is an array name subscripted by @samp{*} or @samp{@@}, -the value substituted is the number of elements in the array. -If @var{parameter} -is an indexed array name subscripted by a negative number, that number is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of -@var{parameter}, so negative indices count back from the end of the -array, and an index of -1 references the last element. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}#@var{word}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter}##@var{word}@} -The @var{word} -is expanded to produce a pattern just as in filename -expansion (@pxref{Filename Expansion}). If the pattern matches -the beginning of the expanded value of @var{parameter}, -then the result of the expansion is the expanded value of @var{parameter} -with the shortest matching pattern (the @samp{#} case) or the -longest matching pattern (the @samp{##} case) deleted. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the pattern removal operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If @var{parameter} is an array variable subscripted with -@samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the pattern removal operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}%@var{word}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter}%%@var{word}@} -The @var{word} is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -filename expansion. -If the pattern matches a trailing portion of the expanded value of -@var{parameter}, then the result of the expansion is the value of -@var{parameter} with the shortest matching pattern (the @samp{%} case) -or the longest matching pattern (the @samp{%%} case) deleted. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the pattern removal operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If @var{parameter} -is an array variable subscripted with @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the pattern removal operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}/@var{pattern}/@var{string}@} - -The @var{pattern} is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -filename expansion. -@var{Parameter} is expanded and the longest match of @var{pattern} -against its value is replaced with @var{string}. -If @var{pattern} begins with @samp{/}, all matches of @var{pattern} are -replaced with @var{string}. Normally only the first match is replaced. -If @var{pattern} begins with @samp{#}, it must match at the beginning -of the expanded value of @var{parameter}. -If @var{pattern} begins with @samp{%}, it must match at the end -of the expanded value of @var{parameter}. -If @var{string} is null, matches of @var{pattern} are deleted -and the @code{/} following @var{pattern} may be omitted. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the substitution operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If @var{parameter} -is an array variable subscripted with @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the substitution operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. - -@item $@{@var{parameter}^@var{pattern}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter}^^@var{pattern}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter},@var{pattern}@} -@itemx $@{@var{parameter},,@var{pattern}@} -This expansion modifies the case of alphabetic characters in @var{parameter}. -The @var{pattern} is expanded to produce a pattern just as in -filename expansion. -Each character in the expanded value of @var{parameter} is tested against -@var{pattern}, and, if it matches the pattern, its case is converted. -The pattern should not attempt to match more than one character. -The @samp{^} operator converts lowercase letters matching @var{pattern} -to uppercase; the @samp{,} operator converts matching uppercase letters -to lowercase. -The @samp{^^} and @samp{,,} expansions convert each matched character in the -expanded value; the @samp{^} and @samp{,} expansions match and convert only -the first character in the expanded value. -If @var{pattern} is omitted, it is treated like a @samp{?}, which matches -every character. -If @var{parameter} is @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the case modification operation is applied to each positional -parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -If @var{parameter} -is an array variable subscripted with @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, -the case modification operation is applied to each member of the -array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. -@end table - -@node Command Substitution -@subsection Command Substitution -@cindex command substitution - -Command substitution allows the output of a command to replace -the command itself. -Command substitution occurs when a command is enclosed as follows: -@example -$(@var{command}) -@end example -@noindent -or -@example -`@var{command}` -@end example - -@noindent -Bash performs the expansion by executing @var{command} and -replacing the command substitution with the standard output of the -command, with any trailing newlines deleted. -Embedded newlines are not deleted, but they may be removed during -word splitting. -The command substitution @code{$(cat @var{file})} can be -replaced by the equivalent but faster @code{$(< @var{file})}. - -When the old-style backquote form of substitution is used, -backslash retains its literal meaning except when followed by -@samp{$}, @samp{`}, or @samp{\}. -The first backquote not preceded by a backslash terminates the -command substitution. -When using the @code{$(@var{command})} form, all characters between -the parentheses make up the command; none are treated specially. - -Command substitutions may be nested. To nest when using the backquoted -form, escape the inner backquotes with backslashes. - -If the substitution appears within double quotes, word splitting and -filename expansion are not performed on the results. - -@node Arithmetic Expansion -@subsection Arithmetic Expansion -@cindex expansion, arithmetic -@cindex arithmetic expansion - -Arithmetic expansion allows the evaluation of an arithmetic expression -and the substitution of the result. The format for arithmetic expansion is: - -@example -$(( @var{expression} )) -@end example - -The expression is treated as if it were within double quotes, but -a double quote inside the parentheses is not treated specially. -All tokens in the expression undergo parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, and quote removal. -The result is treated as the arithmetic expression to be evaluated. -Arithmetic expansions may be nested. - -The evaluation is performed according to the rules listed below -(@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}). -If the expression is invalid, Bash prints a message indicating -failure to the standard error and no substitution occurs. - -@node Process Substitution -@subsection Process Substitution -@cindex process substitution - -Process substitution is supported on systems that support named -pipes (@sc{fifo}s) or the @file{/dev/fd} method of naming open files. -It takes the form of -@example -<(@var{list}) -@end example -@noindent -or -@example ->(@var{list}) -@end example -@noindent -The process @var{list} is run with its input or output connected to a -@sc{fifo} or some file in @file{/dev/fd}. The name of this file is -passed as an argument to the current command as the result of the -expansion. If the @code{>(@var{list})} form is used, writing to -the file will provide input for @var{list}. If the -@code{<(@var{list})} form is used, the file passed as an -argument should be read to obtain the output of @var{list}. -Note that no space may appear between the @code{<} or @code{>} -and the left parenthesis, otherwise the construct would be interpreted -as a redirection. - -When available, process substitution is performed simultaneously with -parameter and variable expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic -expansion. - -@node Word Splitting -@subsection Word Splitting -@cindex word splitting - -The shell scans the results of parameter expansion, command substitution, -and arithmetic expansion that did not occur within double quotes for -word splitting. - -The shell treats each character of @env{$IFS} as a delimiter, and splits -the results of the other expansions into words on these characters. -If @env{IFS} is unset, or its value is exactly @code{}, -the default, then sequences of -@code{ }, @code{}, and @code{} -at the beginning and end of the results of the previous -expansions are ignored, and any sequence of @env{IFS} -characters not at the beginning or end serves to delimit words. -If @env{IFS} has a value other than the default, then sequences of -the whitespace characters @code{space} and @code{tab} -are ignored at the beginning and end of the -word, as long as the whitespace character is in the -value of @env{IFS} (an @env{IFS} whitespace character). -Any character in @env{IFS} that is not @env{IFS} -whitespace, along with any adjacent @env{IFS} -whitespace characters, delimits a field. A sequence of @env{IFS} -whitespace characters is also treated as a delimiter. -If the value of @env{IFS} is null, no word splitting occurs. - -Explicit null arguments (@code{""} or @code{''}) are retained. -Unquoted implicit null arguments, resulting from the expansion of -parameters that have no values, are removed. -If a parameter with no value is expanded within double quotes, a -null argument results and is retained. - -Note that if no expansion occurs, no splitting -is performed. - -@node Filename Expansion -@subsection Filename Expansion -@menu -* Pattern Matching:: How the shell matches patterns. -@end menu -@cindex expansion, filename -@cindex expansion, pathname -@cindex filename expansion -@cindex pathname expansion - -After word splitting, unless the @option{-f} option has been set -(@pxref{The Set Builtin}), Bash scans each word for the characters -@samp{*}, @samp{?}, and @samp{[}. -If one of these characters appears, then the word is -regarded as a @var{pattern}, -and replaced with an alphabetically sorted list of -filenames matching the pattern (@pxref{Pattern Matching}). -If no matching filenames are found, -and the shell option @code{nullglob} is disabled, the word is left -unchanged. -If the @code{nullglob} option is set, and no matches are found, the word -is removed. -If the @code{failglob} shell option is set, and no matches are found, -an error message is printed and the command is not executed. -If the shell option @code{nocaseglob} is enabled, the match is performed -without regard to the case of alphabetic characters. - -When a pattern is used for filename expansion, the character @samp{.} -at the start of a filename or immediately following a slash -must be matched explicitly, unless the shell option @code{dotglob} is set. -When matching a filename, the slash character must always be -matched explicitly. -In other cases, the @samp{.} character is not treated specially. - -See the description of @code{shopt} in @ref{The Shopt Builtin}, -for a description of the @code{nocaseglob}, @code{nullglob}, -@code{failglob}, and @code{dotglob} options. - -The @env{GLOBIGNORE} -shell variable may be used to restrict the set of filenames matching a -pattern. If @env{GLOBIGNORE} -is set, each matching filename that also matches one of the patterns in -@env{GLOBIGNORE} is removed from the list of matches. The filenames -@file{.} and @file{..} -are always ignored when @env{GLOBIGNORE} -is set and not null. -However, setting @env{GLOBIGNORE} to a non-null value has the effect of -enabling the @code{dotglob} -shell option, so all other filenames beginning with a -@samp{.} will match. -To get the old behavior of ignoring filenames beginning with a -@samp{.}, make @samp{.*} one of the patterns in @env{GLOBIGNORE}. -The @code{dotglob} option is disabled when @env{GLOBIGNORE} -is unset. - -@node Pattern Matching -@subsubsection Pattern Matching -@cindex pattern matching -@cindex matching, pattern - -Any character that appears in a pattern, other than the special pattern -characters described below, matches itself. -The @sc{nul} character may not occur in a pattern. -A backslash escapes the following character; the -escaping backslash is discarded when matching. -The special pattern characters must be quoted if they are to be matched -literally. - -The special pattern characters have the following meanings: -@table @code -@item * -Matches any string, including the null string. -When the @code{globstar} shell option is enabled, and @samp{*} is used in -a filename expansion context, two adjacent @samp{*}s used as a single -pattern will match all files and zero or more directories and -subdirectories. -If followed by a @samp{/}, two adjacent @samp{*}s will match only -directories and subdirectories. -@item ? -Matches any single character. -@item [@dots{}] -Matches any one of the enclosed characters. A pair of characters -separated by a hyphen denotes a @var{range expression}; -any character that falls between those two characters, inclusive, -using the current locale's collating sequence and character set, -is matched. If the first character following the -@samp{[} is a @samp{!} or a @samp{^} -then any character not enclosed is matched. A @samp{@minus{}} -may be matched by including it as the first or last character -in the set. A @samp{]} may be matched by including it as the first -character in the set. -The sorting order of characters in range expressions is determined by -the current locale and the values of the -@env{LC_COLLATE} and @env{LC_ALL} shell variables, if set. - -For example, in the default C locale, @samp{[a-dx-z]} is equivalent to -@samp{[abcdxyz]}. Many locales sort characters in dictionary order, and in -these locales @samp{[a-dx-z]} is typically not equivalent to @samp{[abcdxyz]}; -it might be equivalent to @samp{[aBbCcDdxXyYz]}, for example. To obtain -the traditional interpretation of ranges in bracket expressions, you can -force the use of the C locale by setting the @env{LC_COLLATE} or -@env{LC_ALL} environment variable to the value @samp{C}, or enable the -@code{globasciiranges} shell option. - -Within @samp{[} and @samp{]}, @var{character classes} can be specified -using the syntax -@code{[:}@var{class}@code{:]}, where @var{class} is one of the -following classes defined in the @sc{posix} standard: -@example -alnum alpha ascii blank cntrl digit graph lower -print punct space upper word xdigit -@end example -@noindent -A character class matches any character belonging to that class. -The @code{word} character class matches letters, digits, and the character -@samp{_}. - -Within @samp{[} and @samp{]}, an @var{equivalence class} can be -specified using the syntax @code{[=}@var{c}@code{=]}, which -matches all characters with the same collation weight (as defined -by the current locale) as the character @var{c}. - -Within @samp{[} and @samp{]}, the syntax @code{[.}@var{symbol}@code{.]} -matches the collating symbol @var{symbol}. -@end table - -If the @code{extglob} shell option is enabled using the @code{shopt} -builtin, several extended pattern matching operators are recognized. -In the following description, a @var{pattern-list} is a list of one -or more patterns separated by a @samp{|}. -Composite patterns may be formed using one or more of the following -sub-patterns: - -@table @code -@item ?(@var{pattern-list}) -Matches zero or one occurrence of the given patterns. - -@item *(@var{pattern-list}) -Matches zero or more occurrences of the given patterns. - -@item +(@var{pattern-list}) -Matches one or more occurrences of the given patterns. - -@item @@(@var{pattern-list}) -Matches one of the given patterns. - -@item !(@var{pattern-list}) -Matches anything except one of the given patterns. -@end table - -@node Quote Removal -@subsection Quote Removal - -After the preceding expansions, all unquoted occurrences of the -characters @samp{\}, @samp{'}, and @samp{"} that did not -result from one of the above expansions are removed. - -@node Redirections -@section Redirections -@cindex redirection - -Before a command is executed, its input and output -may be @var{redirected} -using a special notation interpreted by the shell. -Redirection allows commands' file handles to be -duplicated, opened, closed, -made to refer to different files, -and can change the files the command reads from and writes to. -Redirection may also be used to modify file handles in the -current shell execution environment. The following redirection -operators may precede or appear anywhere within a -simple command or may follow a command. -Redirections are processed in the order they appear, from -left to right. - -Each redirection that may be preceded by a file descriptor number -may instead be preceded by a word of the form @{@var{varname}@}. -In this case, for each redirection operator except ->&- and <&-, the shell will allocate a file descriptor greater -than 10 and assign it to @{@var{varname}@}. If >&- or <&- is preceded -by @{@var{varname}@}, the value of @var{varname} defines the file -descriptor to close. - -In the following descriptions, if the file descriptor number is -omitted, and the first character of the redirection operator is -@samp{<}, the redirection refers to the standard input (file -descriptor 0). If the first character of the redirection operator -is @samp{>}, the redirection refers to the standard output (file -descriptor 1). - -The word following the redirection operator in the following -descriptions, unless otherwise noted, is subjected to brace expansion, -tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic -expansion, quote removal, filename expansion, and word splitting. -If it expands to more than one word, Bash reports an error. - -Note that the order of redirections is significant. For example, -the command -@example -ls > @var{dirlist} 2>&1 -@end example -@noindent -directs both standard output (file descriptor 1) and standard error -(file descriptor 2) to the file @var{dirlist}, while the command -@example -ls 2>&1 > @var{dirlist} -@end example -@noindent -directs only the standard output to file @var{dirlist}, -because the standard error was made a copy of the standard output -before the standard output was redirected to @var{dirlist}. - -Bash handles several filenames specially when they are used in -redirections, as described in the following table: - -@table @code -@item /dev/fd/@var{fd} -If @var{fd} is a valid integer, file descriptor @var{fd} is duplicated. - -@item /dev/stdin -File descriptor 0 is duplicated. - -@item /dev/stdout -File descriptor 1 is duplicated. - -@item /dev/stderr -File descriptor 2 is duplicated. - -@item /dev/tcp/@var{host}/@var{port} -If @var{host} is a valid hostname or Internet address, and @var{port} -is an integer port number or service name, Bash attempts to open -the corresponding TCP socket. - -@item /dev/udp/@var{host}/@var{port} -If @var{host} is a valid hostname or Internet address, and @var{port} -is an integer port number or service name, Bash attempts to open -the corresponding UDP socket. -@end table - -A failure to open or create a file causes the redirection to fail. - -Redirections using file descriptors greater than 9 should be used with -care, as they may conflict with file descriptors the shell uses -internally. - -@subsection Redirecting Input -Redirection of input causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of @var{word} -to be opened for reading on file descriptor @code{n}, -or the standard input (file descriptor 0) if @code{n} -is not specified. - -The general format for redirecting input is: -@example -[@var{n}]<@var{word} -@end example - -@subsection Redirecting Output -Redirection of output causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of @var{word} -to be opened for writing on file descriptor @var{n}, -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if @var{n} -is not specified. If the file does not exist it is created; -if it does exist it is truncated to zero size. - -The general format for redirecting output is: -@example -[@var{n}]>[|]@var{word} -@end example - -If the redirection operator is @samp{>}, and the @code{noclobber} -option to the @code{set} builtin has been enabled, the redirection -will fail if the file whose name results from the expansion of -@var{word} exists and is a regular file. -If the redirection operator is @samp{>|}, or the redirection operator is -@samp{>} and the @code{noclobber} option is not enabled, the redirection -is attempted even if the file named by @var{word} exists. - -@subsection Appending Redirected Output -Redirection of output in this fashion -causes the file whose name results from -the expansion of @var{word} -to be opened for appending on file descriptor @var{n}, -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if @var{n} -is not specified. If the file does not exist it is created. - -The general format for appending output is: -@example -[@var{n}]>>@var{word} -@end example - -@subsection Redirecting Standard Output and Standard Error -This construct allows both the -standard output (file descriptor 1) and -the standard error output (file descriptor 2) -to be redirected to the file whose name is the -expansion of @var{word}. - -There are two formats for redirecting standard output and -standard error: -@example -&>@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -and -@example ->&@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -Of the two forms, the first is preferred. -This is semantically equivalent to -@example ->@var{word} 2>&1 -@end example -When using the second form, @var{word} may not expand to a number or -@samp{-}. If it does, other redirection operators apply -(see Duplicating File Descriptors below) for compatibility reasons. - -@subsection Appending Standard Output and Standard Error -This construct allows both the -standard output (file descriptor 1) and -the standard error output (file descriptor 2) -to be appended to the file whose name is the -expansion of @var{word}. - -The format for appending standard output and standard error is: -@example -&>>@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -This is semantically equivalent to -@example ->>@var{word} 2>&1 -@end example -(see Duplicating File Descriptors below). - -@subsection Here Documents -This type of redirection instructs the shell to read input from the -current source until a line containing only @var{word} -(with no trailing blanks) is seen. All of -the lines read up to that point are then used as the standard -input for a command. - -The format of here-documents is: -@example -<<[@minus{}]@var{word} - @var{here-document} -@var{delimiter} -@end example - -No parameter and variable expansion, command substitution, -arithmetic expansion, or filename expansion is performed on -@var{word}. If any characters in @var{word} are quoted, the -@var{delimiter} is the result of quote removal on @var{word}, -and the lines in the here-document are not expanded. -If @var{word} is unquoted, -all lines of the here-document are subjected to -parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion, -the character sequence @code{\newline} is ignored, and @samp{\} -must be used to quote the characters -@samp{\}, @samp{$}, and @samp{`}. - -If the redirection operator is @samp{<<-}, -then all leading tab characters are stripped from input lines and the -line containing @var{delimiter}. -This allows here-documents within shell scripts to be indented in a -natural fashion. - -@subsection Here Strings -A variant of here documents, the format is: -@example -<<< @var{word} -@end example - -The @var{word} undergoes -brace expansion, tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion, -command substitution, arithmetic expansion, and quote removal. -Pathname expansion and word splitting are not performed. -The result is supplied as a single string to the command on its -standard input. - -@subsection Duplicating File Descriptors -The redirection operator -@example -[@var{n}]<&@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -is used to duplicate input file descriptors. -If @var{word} -expands to one or more digits, the file descriptor denoted by @var{n} -is made to be a copy of that file descriptor. -If the digits in @var{word} do not specify a file descriptor open for -input, a redirection error occurs. -If @var{word} -evaluates to @samp{-}, file descriptor @var{n} is closed. -If @var{n} is not specified, the standard input (file descriptor 0) is used. - -The operator -@example -[@var{n}]>&@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -is used similarly to duplicate output file descriptors. If -@var{n} is not specified, the standard output (file descriptor 1) is used. -If the digits in @var{word} do not specify a file descriptor open for -output, a redirection error occurs. -If @var{word} -evaluates to @samp{-}, file descriptor @var{n} is closed. -As a special case, if @var{n} is omitted, and @var{word} does not -expand to one or more digits or @samp{-}, the standard output and standard -error are redirected as described previously. - -@subsection Moving File Descriptors -The redirection operator -@example -[@var{n}]<&@var{digit}- -@end example -@noindent -moves the file descriptor @var{digit} to file descriptor @var{n}, -or the standard input (file descriptor 0) if @var{n} is not specified. -@var{digit} is closed after being duplicated to @var{n}. - -Similarly, the redirection operator -@example -[@var{n}]>&@var{digit}- -@end example -@noindent -moves the file descriptor @var{digit} to file descriptor @var{n}, -or the standard output (file descriptor 1) if @var{n} is not specified. - -@subsection Opening File Descriptors for Reading and Writing -The redirection operator -@example -[@var{n}]<>@var{word} -@end example -@noindent -causes the file whose name is the expansion of @var{word} -to be opened for both reading and writing on file descriptor -@var{n}, or on file descriptor 0 if @var{n} -is not specified. If the file does not exist, it is created. - -@node Executing Commands -@section Executing Commands - -@menu -* Simple Command Expansion:: How Bash expands simple commands before - executing them. -* Command Search and Execution:: How Bash finds commands and runs them. -* Command Execution Environment:: The environment in which Bash - executes commands that are not - shell builtins. -* Environment:: The environment given to a command. -* Exit Status:: The status returned by commands and how Bash - interprets it. -* Signals:: What happens when Bash or a command it runs - receives a signal. -@end menu - -@node Simple Command Expansion -@subsection Simple Command Expansion -@cindex command expansion - -When a simple command is executed, the shell performs the following -expansions, assignments, and redirections, from left to right. - -@enumerate -@item -The words that the parser has marked as variable assignments (those -preceding the command name) and redirections are saved for later -processing. - -@item -The words that are not variable assignments or redirections are -expanded (@pxref{Shell Expansions}). -If any words remain after expansion, the first word -is taken to be the name of the command and the remaining words are -the arguments. - -@item -Redirections are performed as described above (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item -The text after the @samp{=} in each variable assignment undergoes tilde -expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic expansion, -and quote removal before being assigned to the variable. -@end enumerate - -If no command name results, the variable assignments affect the current -shell environment. Otherwise, the variables are added to the environment -of the executed command and do not affect the current shell environment. -If any of the assignments attempts to assign a value to a readonly variable, -an error occurs, and the command exits with a non-zero status. - -If no command name results, redirections are performed, but do not -affect the current shell environment. A redirection error causes the -command to exit with a non-zero status. - -If there is a command name left after expansion, execution proceeds as -described below. Otherwise, the command exits. If one of the expansions -contained a command substitution, the exit status of the command is -the exit status of the last command substitution performed. If there -were no command substitutions, the command exits with a status of zero. - -@node Command Search and Execution -@subsection Command Search and Execution -@cindex command execution -@cindex command search - -After a command has been split into words, if it results in a -simple command and an optional list of arguments, the following -actions are taken. - -@enumerate -@item -If the command name contains no slashes, the shell attempts to -locate it. If there exists a shell function by that name, that -function is invoked as described in @ref{Shell Functions}. - -@item -If the name does not match a function, the shell searches for -it in the list of shell builtins. If a match is found, that -builtin is invoked. - -@item -If the name is neither a shell function nor a builtin, -and contains no slashes, Bash searches each element of -@env{$PATH} for a directory containing an executable file -by that name. Bash uses a hash table to remember the full -pathnames of executable files to avoid multiple @env{PATH} searches -(see the description of @code{hash} in @ref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). -A full search of the directories in @env{$PATH} -is performed only if the command is not found in the hash table. -If the search is unsuccessful, the shell searches for a defined shell -function named @code{command_not_found_handle}. -If that function exists, it is invoked with the original command and -the original command's arguments as its arguments, and the function's -exit status becomes the exit status of the shell. -If that function is not defined, the shell prints an error -message and returns an exit status of 127. - -@item -If the search is successful, or if the command name contains -one or more slashes, the shell executes the named program in -a separate execution environment. -Argument 0 is set to the name given, and the remaining arguments -to the command are set to the arguments supplied, if any. - -@item -If this execution fails because the file is not in executable -format, and the file is not a directory, it is assumed to be a -@var{shell script} and the shell executes it as described in -@ref{Shell Scripts}. - -@item -If the command was not begun asynchronously, the shell waits for -the command to complete and collects its exit status. - -@end enumerate - -@node Command Execution Environment -@subsection Command Execution Environment -@cindex execution environment - -The shell has an @var{execution environment}, which consists of the -following: - -@itemize @bullet -@item -open files inherited by the shell at invocation, as modified by -redirections supplied to the @code{exec} builtin - -@item -the current working directory as set by @code{cd}, @code{pushd}, or -@code{popd}, or inherited by the shell at invocation - -@item -the file creation mode mask as set by @code{umask} or inherited from -the shell's parent - -@item -current traps set by @code{trap} - -@item -shell parameters that are set by variable assignment or with @code{set} -or inherited from the shell's parent in the environment - -@item -shell functions defined during execution or inherited from the shell's -parent in the environment - -@item -options enabled at invocation (either by default or with command-line -arguments) or by @code{set} - -@item -options enabled by @code{shopt} (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}) - -@item -shell aliases defined with @code{alias} (@pxref{Aliases}) - -@item -various process @sc{id}s, including those of background jobs -(@pxref{Lists}), the value of @code{$$}, and the value of -@env{$PPID} - -@end itemize - -When a simple command other than a builtin or shell function -is to be executed, it -is invoked in a separate execution environment that consists of -the following. Unless otherwise noted, the values are inherited -from the shell. - -@itemize @bullet -@item -the shell's open files, plus any modifications and additions specified -by redirections to the command - -@item -the current working directory - -@item -the file creation mode mask - -@item -shell variables and functions marked for export, along with variables -exported for the command, passed in the environment (@pxref{Environment}) - -@item -traps caught by the shell are reset to the values inherited from the -shell's parent, and traps ignored by the shell are ignored - -@end itemize - -A command invoked in this separate environment cannot affect the -shell's execution environment. - -Command substitution, commands grouped with parentheses, -and asynchronous commands are invoked in a -subshell environment that is a duplicate of the shell environment, -except that traps caught by the shell are reset to the values -that the shell inherited from its parent at invocation. Builtin -commands that are invoked as part of a pipeline are also executed -in a subshell environment. Changes made to the subshell environment -cannot affect the shell's execution environment. - -Subshells spawned to execute command substitutions inherit the value of -the @option{-e} option from the parent shell. When not in @sc{posix} mode, -Bash clears the @option{-e} option in such subshells. - -If a command is followed by a @samp{&} and job control is not active, the -default standard input for the command is the empty file @file{/dev/null}. -Otherwise, the invoked command inherits the file descriptors of the calling -shell as modified by redirections. - -@node Environment -@subsection Environment -@cindex environment - -When a program is invoked it is given an array of strings -called the @var{environment}. -This is a list of name-value pairs, of the form @code{name=value}. - -Bash provides several ways to manipulate the environment. -On invocation, the shell scans its own environment and -creates a parameter for each name found, automatically marking -it for @var{export} -to child processes. Executed commands inherit the environment. -The @code{export} and @samp{declare -x} -commands allow parameters and functions to be added to and -deleted from the environment. If the value of a parameter -in the environment is modified, the new value becomes part -of the environment, replacing the old. The environment -inherited by any executed command consists of the shell's -initial environment, whose values may be modified in the shell, -less any pairs removed by the @code{unset} and @samp{export -n} -commands, plus any additions via the @code{export} and -@samp{declare -x} commands. - -The environment for any simple command -or function may be augmented temporarily by prefixing it with -parameter assignments, as described in @ref{Shell Parameters}. -These assignment statements affect only the environment seen -by that command. - -If the @option{-k} option is set (@pxref{The Set Builtin}), then all -parameter assignments are placed in the environment for a command, -not just those that precede the command name. - -When Bash invokes an external command, the variable @samp{$_} -is set to the full pathname of the command and passed to that -command in its environment. - -@node Exit Status -@subsection Exit Status -@cindex exit status - -The exit status of an executed command is the value returned by the -@var{waitpid} system call or equivalent function. Exit statuses -fall between 0 and 255, though, as explained below, the shell may -use values above 125 specially. Exit statuses from shell builtins and -compound commands are also limited to this range. Under certain -circumstances, the shell will use special values to indicate specific -failure modes. - -For the shell's purposes, a command which exits with a -zero exit status has succeeded. -A non-zero exit status indicates failure. -This seemingly counter-intuitive scheme is used so there -is one well-defined way to indicate success and a variety of -ways to indicate various failure modes. -When a command terminates on a fatal signal whose number is @var{N}, -Bash uses the value 128+@var{N} as the exit status. - -If a command is not found, the child process created to -execute it returns a status of 127. If a command is found -but is not executable, the return status is 126. - -If a command fails because of an error during expansion or redirection, -the exit status is greater than zero. - -The exit status is used by the Bash conditional commands -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}) and some of the list -constructs (@pxref{Lists}). - -All of the Bash builtins return an exit status of zero if they succeed -and a non-zero status on failure, so they may be used by the -conditional and list constructs. -All builtins return an exit status of 2 to indicate incorrect usage. - -@node Signals -@subsection Signals -@cindex signal handling - -When Bash is interactive, in the absence of any traps, it ignores -@code{SIGTERM} (so that @samp{kill 0} does not kill an interactive shell), -and @code{SIGINT} -is caught and handled (so that the @code{wait} builtin is interruptible). -When Bash receives a @code{SIGINT}, it breaks out of any executing loops. -In all cases, Bash ignores @code{SIGQUIT}. -If job control is in effect (@pxref{Job Control}), Bash -ignores @code{SIGTTIN}, @code{SIGTTOU}, and @code{SIGTSTP}. - -Non-builtin commands started by Bash have signal handlers set to the -values inherited by the shell from its parent. -When job control is not in effect, asynchronous commands -ignore @code{SIGINT} and @code{SIGQUIT} in addition to these inherited -handlers. -Commands run as a result of -command substitution ignore the keyboard-generated job control signals -@code{SIGTTIN}, @code{SIGTTOU}, and @code{SIGTSTP}. - -The shell exits by default upon receipt of a @code{SIGHUP}. -Before exiting, an interactive shell resends the @code{SIGHUP} to -all jobs, running or stopped. -Stopped jobs are sent @code{SIGCONT} to ensure that they receive -the @code{SIGHUP}. -To prevent the shell from sending the @code{SIGHUP} signal to a -particular job, it should be removed -from the jobs table with the @code{disown} -builtin (@pxref{Job Control Builtins}) or marked -to not receive @code{SIGHUP} using @code{disown -h}. - -If the @code{huponexit} shell option has been set with @code{shopt} -(@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), Bash sends a @code{SIGHUP} to all jobs when -an interactive login shell exits. - -If Bash is waiting for a command to complete and receives a signal -for which a trap has been set, the trap will not be executed until -the command completes. -When Bash is waiting for an asynchronous -command via the @code{wait} builtin, the reception of a signal for -which a trap has been set will cause the @code{wait} builtin to return -immediately with an exit status greater than 128, immediately after -which the trap is executed. - -@node Shell Scripts -@section Shell Scripts -@cindex shell script - -A shell script is a text file containing shell commands. When such -a file is used as the first non-option argument when invoking Bash, -and neither the @option{-c} nor @option{-s} option is supplied -(@pxref{Invoking Bash}), -Bash reads and executes commands from the file, then exits. This -mode of operation creates a non-interactive shell. The shell first -searches for the file in the current directory, and looks in the -directories in @env{$PATH} if not found there. - -When Bash runs -a shell script, it sets the special parameter @code{0} to the name -of the file, rather than the name of the shell, and the positional -parameters are set to the remaining arguments, if any are given. -If no additional arguments are supplied, the positional parameters -are unset. - -A shell script may be made executable by using the @code{chmod} command -to turn on the execute bit. When Bash finds such a file while -searching the @env{$PATH} for a command, it spawns a subshell to -execute it. In other words, executing -@example -filename @var{arguments} -@end example -@noindent -is equivalent to executing -@example -bash filename @var{arguments} -@end example - -@noindent -if @code{filename} is an executable shell script. -This subshell reinitializes itself, so that the effect is as if a -new shell had been invoked to interpret the script, with the -exception that the locations of commands remembered by the parent -(see the description of @code{hash} in @ref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) -are retained by the child. - -Most versions of Unix make this a part of the operating system's command -execution mechanism. If the first line of a script begins with -the two characters @samp{#!}, the remainder of the line specifies -an interpreter for the program. -Thus, you can specify Bash, @code{awk}, Perl, or some other -interpreter and write the rest of the script file in that language. - -The arguments to the interpreter -consist of a single optional argument following the interpreter -name on the first line of the script file, followed by the name of -the script file, followed by the rest of the arguments. Bash -will perform this action on operating systems that do not handle it -themselves. Note that some older versions of Unix limit the interpreter -name and argument to a maximum of 32 characters. - -Bash scripts often begin with @code{#! /bin/bash} (assuming that -Bash has been installed in @file{/bin}), since this ensures that -Bash will be used to interpret the script, even if it is executed -under another shell. - -@node Shell Builtin Commands -@chapter Shell Builtin Commands - -@menu -* Bourne Shell Builtins:: Builtin commands inherited from the Bourne - Shell. -* Bash Builtins:: Table of builtins specific to Bash. -* Modifying Shell Behavior:: Builtins to modify shell attributes and - optional behavior. -* Special Builtins:: Builtin commands classified specially by - POSIX. -@end menu - -Builtin commands are contained within the shell itself. -When the name of a builtin command is used as the first word of -a simple command (@pxref{Simple Commands}), the shell executes -the command directly, without invoking another program. -Builtin commands are necessary to implement functionality impossible -or inconvenient to obtain with separate utilities. - -This section briefly describes the builtins which Bash inherits from -the Bourne Shell, as well as the builtin commands which are unique -to or have been extended in Bash. - -Several builtin commands are described in other chapters: builtin -commands which provide the Bash interface to the job control -facilities (@pxref{Job Control Builtins}), the directory stack -(@pxref{Directory Stack Builtins}), the command history -(@pxref{Bash History Builtins}), and the programmable completion -facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion Builtins}). - -Many of the builtins have been extended by @sc{posix} or Bash. - -Unless otherwise noted, each builtin command documented as accepting -options preceded by @samp{-} accepts @samp{--} -to signify the end of the options. -The @code{:}, @code{true}, @code{false}, and @code{test} -builtins do not accept options and do not treat @samp{--} specially. -The @code{exit}, @code{logout}, @code{break}, @code{continue}, @code{let}, -and @code{shift} builtins accept and process arguments beginning -with @samp{-} without requiring @samp{--}. -Other builtins that accept arguments but are not specified as accepting -options interpret arguments beginning with @samp{-} as invalid options and -require @samp{--} to prevent this interpretation. - -@node Bourne Shell Builtins -@section Bourne Shell Builtins - -The following shell builtin commands are inherited from the Bourne Shell. -These commands are implemented as specified by the @sc{posix} standard. - -@table @code -@item : @r{(a colon)} -@btindex : -@example -: [@var{arguments}] -@end example - -Do nothing beyond expanding @var{arguments} and performing redirections. -The return status is zero. - -@item . @r{(a period)} -@btindex . -@example -. @var{filename} [@var{arguments}] -@end example - -Read and execute commands from the @var{filename} argument in the -current shell context. If @var{filename} does not contain a slash, -the @env{PATH} variable is used to find @var{filename}. -When Bash is not in @sc{posix} mode, the current directory is searched -if @var{filename} is not found in @env{$PATH}. -If any @var{arguments} are supplied, they become the positional -parameters when @var{filename} is executed. Otherwise the positional -parameters are unchanged. -The return status is the exit status of the last command executed, or -zero if no commands are executed. If @var{filename} is not found, or -cannot be read, the return status is non-zero. -This builtin is equivalent to @code{source}. - -@item break -@btindex break -@example -break [@var{n}] -@end example - -Exit from a @code{for}, @code{while}, @code{until}, or @code{select} loop. -If @var{n} is supplied, the @var{n}th enclosing loop is exited. -@var{n} must be greater than or equal to 1. -The return status is zero unless @var{n} is not greater than or equal to 1. - -@item cd -@btindex cd -@example -cd [-L|[-P [-e]]] [@var{directory}] -@end example - -Change the current working directory to @var{directory}. -If @var{directory} is not supplied, the value of the @env{HOME} -shell variable is used. -Any additional arguments following @var{directory} are ignored. -If the shell variable -@env{CDPATH} exists, it is used as a search path: -each directory name in @env{CDPATH} is searched for -@var{directory}, with alternative directory names in @env{CDPATH} -separated by a colon (@samp{:}). -If @var{directory} begins with a slash, @env{CDPATH} is not used. - -The @option{-P} option means to not follow symbolic links: symbolic links -are resolved while @code{cd} is traversing @var{directory} and before -processing an instance of @samp{..} in @var{directory}. - -By default, or when the @option{-L} option is supplied, symbolic links -in @var{directory} are resolved after @code{cd} processes an instance -of @samp{..} in @var{directory}. - -If @samp{..} appears in @var{directory}, it is processed by removing the -immediately preceding pathname component, back to a slash or the beginning -of @var{directory}. - -If the @option{-e} option is supplied with @option{-P} -and the current working directory cannot be successfully determined -after a successful directory change, @code{cd} will return an unsuccessful -status. -If @var{directory} is @samp{-}, it is converted to @env{$OLDPWD} -before the directory change is attempted. - -If a non-empty directory name from @env{CDPATH} is used, or if -@samp{-} is the first argument, and the directory change is -successful, the absolute pathname of the new working directory is -written to the standard output. - -The return status is zero if the directory is successfully changed, -non-zero otherwise. - -@item continue -@btindex continue -@example -continue [@var{n}] -@end example - -Resume the next iteration of an enclosing @code{for}, @code{while}, -@code{until}, or @code{select} loop. -If @var{n} is supplied, the execution of the @var{n}th enclosing loop -is resumed. -@var{n} must be greater than or equal to 1. -The return status is zero unless @var{n} is not greater than or equal to 1. - -@item eval -@btindex eval -@example -eval [@var{arguments}] -@end example - -The arguments are concatenated together into a single command, which is -then read and executed, and its exit status returned as the exit status -of @code{eval}. -If there are no arguments or only empty arguments, the return status is -zero. - -@item exec -@btindex exec -@example -exec [-cl] [-a @var{name}] [@var{command} [@var{arguments}]] -@end example - -If @var{command} -is supplied, it replaces the shell without creating a new process. -If the @option{-l} option is supplied, the shell places a dash at the -beginning of the zeroth argument passed to @var{command}. -This is what the @code{login} program does. -The @option{-c} option causes @var{command} to be executed with an empty -environment. -If @option{-a} is supplied, the shell passes @var{name} as the zeroth -argument to @var{command}. -If @var{command} -cannot be executed for some reason, a non-interactive shell exits, -unless the @code{execfail} shell option -is enabled. In that case, it returns failure. -An interactive shell returns failure if the file cannot be executed. -If no @var{command} is specified, redirections may be used to affect -the current shell environment. If there are no redirection errors, the -return status is zero; otherwise the return status is non-zero. - -@item exit -@btindex exit -@example -exit [@var{n}] -@end example - -Exit the shell, returning a status of @var{n} to the shell's parent. -If @var{n} is omitted, the exit status is that of the last command executed. -Any trap on @code{EXIT} is executed before the shell terminates. - -@item export -@btindex export -@example -export [-fn] [-p] [@var{name}[=@var{value}]] -@end example - -Mark each @var{name} to be passed to child processes -in the environment. If the @option{-f} option is supplied, the @var{name}s -refer to shell functions; otherwise the names refer to shell variables. -The @option{-n} option means to no longer mark each @var{name} for export. -If no @var{names} are supplied, or if the @option{-p} option is given, a -list of names of all exported variables is displayed. -The @option{-p} option displays output in a form that may be reused as input. -If a variable name is followed by =@var{value}, the value of -the variable is set to @var{value}. - -The return status is zero unless an invalid option is supplied, one of -the names is not a valid shell variable name, or @option{-f} is supplied -with a name that is not a shell function. - -@item getopts -@btindex getopts -@example -getopts @var{optstring} @var{name} [@var{args}] -@end example - -@code{getopts} is used by shell scripts to parse positional parameters. -@var{optstring} contains the option characters to be recognized; if a -character is followed by a colon, the option is expected to have an -argument, which should be separated from it by whitespace. -The colon (@samp{:}) and question mark (@samp{?}) may not be -used as option characters. -Each time it is invoked, @code{getopts} -places the next option in the shell variable @var{name}, initializing -@var{name} if it does not exist, -and the index of the next argument to be processed into the -variable @env{OPTIND}. -@env{OPTIND} is initialized to 1 each time the shell or a shell script -is invoked. -When an option requires an argument, -@code{getopts} places that argument into the variable @env{OPTARG}. -The shell does not reset @env{OPTIND} automatically; it must be manually -reset between multiple calls to @code{getopts} within the same shell -invocation if a new set of parameters is to be used. - -When the end of options is encountered, @code{getopts} exits with a -return value greater than zero. -@env{OPTIND} is set to the index of the first non-option argument, -and @var{name} is set to @samp{?}. - -@code{getopts} -normally parses the positional parameters, but if more arguments are -given in @var{args}, @code{getopts} parses those instead. - -@code{getopts} can report errors in two ways. If the first character of -@var{optstring} is a colon, @var{silent} -error reporting is used. In normal operation, diagnostic messages -are printed when invalid options or missing option arguments are -encountered. -If the variable @env{OPTERR} -is set to 0, no error messages will be displayed, even if the first -character of @code{optstring} is not a colon. - -If an invalid option is seen, -@code{getopts} places @samp{?} into @var{name} and, if not silent, -prints an error message and unsets @env{OPTARG}. -If @code{getopts} is silent, the option character found is placed in -@env{OPTARG} and no diagnostic message is printed. - -If a required argument is not found, and @code{getopts} -is not silent, a question mark (@samp{?}) is placed in @var{name}, -@code{OPTARG} is unset, and a diagnostic message is printed. -If @code{getopts} is silent, then a colon (@samp{:}) is placed in -@var{name} and @env{OPTARG} is set to the option character found. - -@item hash -@btindex hash -@example -hash [-r] [-p @var{filename}] [-dt] [@var{name}] -@end example - -Each time @code{hash} is invoked, it remembers the full pathnames of the -commands specified as @var{name} arguments, -so they need not be searched for on subsequent invocations. -The commands are found by searching through the directories listed in -@env{$PATH}. -Any previously-remembered pathname is discarded. -The @option{-p} option inhibits the path search, and @var{filename} is -used as the location of @var{name}. -The @option{-r} option causes the shell to forget all remembered locations. -The @option{-d} option causes the shell to forget the remembered location -of each @var{name}. -If the @option{-t} option is supplied, the full pathname to which each -@var{name} corresponds is printed. If multiple @var{name} arguments are -supplied with @option{-t} the @var{name} is printed before the hashed -full pathname. -The @option{-l} option causes output to be displayed in a format -that may be reused as input. -If no arguments are given, or if only @option{-l} is supplied, -information about remembered commands is printed. -The return status is zero unless a @var{name} is not found or an invalid -option is supplied. - -@item pwd -@btindex pwd -@example -pwd [-LP] -@end example - -Print the absolute pathname of the current working directory. -If the @option{-P} option is supplied, the pathname printed will not -contain symbolic links. -If the @option{-L} option is supplied, the pathname printed may contain -symbolic links. -The return status is zero unless an error is encountered while -determining the name of the current directory or an invalid option -is supplied. - -@item readonly -@btindex readonly -@example -readonly [-aAf] [-p] [@var{name}[=@var{value}]] @dots{} -@end example - -Mark each @var{name} as readonly. -The values of these names may not be changed by subsequent assignment. -If the @option{-f} option is supplied, each @var{name} refers to a shell -function. -The @option{-a} option means each @var{name} refers to an indexed -array variable; the @option{-A} option means each @var{name} refers -to an associative array variable. -If both options are supplied, @option{-A} takes precedence. -If no @var{name} arguments are given, or if the @option{-p} -option is supplied, a list of all readonly names is printed. -The other options may be used to restrict the output to a subset of -the set of readonly names. -The @option{-p} option causes output to be displayed in a format that -may be reused as input. -If a variable name is followed by =@var{value}, the value of -the variable is set to @var{value}. -The return status is zero unless an invalid option is supplied, one of -the @var{name} arguments is not a valid shell variable or function name, -or the @option{-f} option is supplied with a name that is not a shell function. - -@item return -@btindex return -@example -return [@var{n}] -@end example - -Cause a shell function to stop executing and return the value @var{n} -to its caller. -If @var{n} is not supplied, the return value is the exit status of the -last command executed in the function. -@code{return} may also be used to terminate execution of a script -being executed with the @code{.} (@code{source}) builtin, -returning either @var{n} or -the exit status of the last command executed within the script as the exit -status of the script. -If @var{n} is supplied, the return value is its least significant -8 bits. -Any command associated with the @code{RETURN} trap is executed -before execution resumes after the function or script. -The return status is non-zero if @code{return} is supplied a non-numeric -argument or is used outside a function -and not during the execution of a script by @code{.} or @code{source}. - -@item shift -@btindex shift -@example -shift [@var{n}] -@end example - -Shift the positional parameters to the left by @var{n}. -The positional parameters from @var{n}+1 @dots{} @code{$#} are -renamed to @code{$1} @dots{} @code{$#}-@var{n}. -Parameters represented by the numbers @code{$#} to @code{$#}-@var{n}+1 -are unset. -@var{n} must be a non-negative number less than or equal to @code{$#}. -If @var{n} is zero or greater than @code{$#}, the positional parameters -are not changed. -If @var{n} is not supplied, it is assumed to be 1. -The return status is zero unless @var{n} is greater than @code{$#} or -less than zero, non-zero otherwise. - -@item test -@itemx [ -@btindex test -@btindex [ -@example -test @var{expr} -@end example - -Evaluate a conditional express -ion @var{expr} and return a status of 0 -(true) or 1 (false). -Each operator and operand must be a separate argument. -Expressions are composed of the primaries described below in -@ref{Bash Conditional Expressions}. -@code{test} does not accept any options, nor does it accept and ignore -an argument of @option{--} as signifying the end of options. - -When the @code{[} form is used, the last argument to the command must -be a @code{]}. - -Expressions may be combined using the following operators, listed in -decreasing order of precedence. -The evaluation depends on the number of arguments; see below. -Operator precedence is used when there are five or more arguments. - -@table @code -@item ! @var{expr} -True if @var{expr} is false. - -@item ( @var{expr} ) -Returns the value of @var{expr}. -This may be used to override the normal precedence of operators. - -@item @var{expr1} -a @var{expr2} -True if both @var{expr1} and @var{expr2} are true. - -@item @var{expr1} -o @var{expr2} -True if either @var{expr1} or @var{expr2} is true. -@end table - -The @code{test} and @code{[} builtins evaluate conditional -expressions using a set of rules based on the number of arguments. - -@table @asis -@item 0 arguments -The expression is false. - -@item 1 argument -The expression is true if and only if the argument is not null. - -@item 2 arguments -If the first argument is @samp{!}, the expression is true if and -only if the second argument is null. -If the first argument is one of the unary conditional operators -(@pxref{Bash Conditional Expressions}), the expression -is true if the unary test is true. -If the first argument is not a valid unary operator, the expression is -false. - -@item 3 arguments -The following conditions are applied in the order listed. -If the second argument is one of the binary conditional -operators (@pxref{Bash Conditional Expressions}), the -result of the expression is the result of the binary test using the -first and third arguments as operands. -The @samp{-a} and @samp{-o} operators are considered binary operators -when there are three arguments. -If the first argument is @samp{!}, the value is the negation of -the two-argument test using the second and third arguments. -If the first argument is exactly @samp{(} and the third argument is -exactly @samp{)}, the result is the one-argument test of the second -argument. -Otherwise, the expression is false. - -@item 4 arguments -If the first argument is @samp{!}, the result is the negation of -the three-argument expression composed of the remaining arguments. -Otherwise, the expression is parsed and evaluated according to -precedence using the rules listed above. - -@item 5 or more arguments -The expression is parsed and evaluated according to precedence -using the rules listed above. -@end table - -When used with @code{test} or @samp{[}, the @samp{<} and @samp{>} -operators sort lexicographically using ASCII ordering. - -@item times -@btindex times -@example -times -@end example - -Print out the user and system times used by the shell and its children. -The return status is zero. - -@item trap -@btindex trap -@example -trap [-lp] [@var{arg}] [@var{sigspec} @dots{}] -@end example - -The commands in @var{arg} are to be read and executed when the -shell receives signal @var{sigspec}. If @var{arg} is absent (and -there is a single @var{sigspec}) or -equal to @samp{-}, each specified signal's disposition is reset -to the value it had when the shell was started. -If @var{arg} is the null string, then the signal specified by -each @var{sigspec} is ignored by the shell and commands it invokes. -If @var{arg} is not present and @option{-p} has been supplied, -the shell displays the trap commands associated with each @var{sigspec}. -If no arguments are supplied, or -only @option{-p} is given, @code{trap} prints the list of commands -associated with each signal number in a form that may be reused as -shell input. -The @option{-l} option causes the shell to print a list of signal names -and their corresponding numbers. -Each @var{sigspec} is either a signal name or a signal number. -Signal names are case insensitive and the @code{SIG} prefix is optional. - -If a @var{sigspec} -is @code{0} or @code{EXIT}, @var{arg} is executed when the shell exits. -If a @var{sigspec} is @code{DEBUG}, the command @var{arg} is executed -before every simple command, @code{for} command, @code{case} command, -@code{select} command, every arithmetic @code{for} command, and before -the first command executes in a shell function. -Refer to the description of the @code{extdebug} option to the -@code{shopt} builtin (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}) for details of its -effect on the @code{DEBUG} trap. -If a @var{sigspec} is @code{RETURN}, the command @var{arg} is executed -each time a shell function or a script executed with the @code{.} or -@code{source} builtins finishes executing. - -If a @var{sigspec} is @code{ERR}, the command @var{arg} -is executed whenever -a pipeline (which may consist of a single simple -command), a list, or a compound command returns a -non-zero exit status, -subject to the following conditions. -The @code{ERR} trap is not executed if the failed command is part of the -command list immediately following an @code{until} or @code{while} keyword, -part of the test following the @code{if} or @code{elif} reserved words, -part of a command executed in a @code{&&} or @code{||} list -except the command following the final @code{&&} or @code{||}, -any command in a pipeline but the last, -or if the command's return -status is being inverted using @code{!}. -These are the same conditions obeyed by the @code{errexit} (@option{-e}) -option. - -Signals ignored upon entry to the shell cannot be trapped or reset. -Trapped signals that are not being ignored are reset to their original -values in a subshell or subshell environment when one is created. - -The return status is zero unless a @var{sigspec} does not specify a -valid signal. - -@item umask -@btindex umask -@example -umask [-p] [-S] [@var{mode}] -@end example - -Set the shell process's file creation mask to @var{mode}. If -@var{mode} begins with a digit, it is interpreted as an octal number; -if not, it is interpreted as a symbolic mode mask similar -to that accepted by the @code{chmod} command. If @var{mode} is -omitted, the current value of the mask is printed. If the @option{-S} -option is supplied without a @var{mode} argument, the mask is printed -in a symbolic format. -If the @option{-p} option is supplied, and @var{mode} -is omitted, the output is in a form that may be reused as input. -The return status is zero if the mode is successfully changed or if -no @var{mode} argument is supplied, and non-zero otherwise. - -Note that when the mode is interpreted as an octal number, each number -of the umask is subtracted from @code{7}. Thus, a umask of @code{022} -results in permissions of @code{755}. - -@item unset -@btindex unset -@example -unset [-fnv] [@var{name}] -@end example - -Remove each variable or function @var{name}. -If the @option{-v} option is given, each -@var{name} refers to a shell variable and that variable is remvoved. -If the @option{-f} option is given, the @var{name}s refer to shell -functions, and the function definition is removed. -If the @option{-n} option is supplied, and @var{name} is a variable with -the @var{nameref} attribute, @var{name} will be unset rather than the -variable it references. -@option{-n} has no effect if the @option{-f} option is supplied. -If no options are supplied, each @var{name} refers to a variable; if -there is no variable by that name, any function with that name is -unset. -Readonly variables and functions may not be unset. -The return status is zero unless a @var{name} is readonly. -@end table - -@node Bash Builtins -@section Bash Builtin Commands - -This section describes builtin commands which are unique to -or have been extended in Bash. -Some of these commands are specified in the @sc{posix} standard. - -@table @code - -@item alias -@btindex alias -@example -alias [-p] [@var{name}[=@var{value}] @dots{}] -@end example - -Without arguments or with the @option{-p} option, @code{alias} prints -the list of aliases on the standard output in a form that allows -them to be reused as input. -If arguments are supplied, an alias is defined for each @var{name} -whose @var{value} is given. If no @var{value} is given, the name -and value of the alias is printed. -Aliases are described in @ref{Aliases}. - -@item bind -@btindex bind -@example -bind [-m @var{keymap}] [-lpsvPSVX] -bind [-m @var{keymap}] [-q @var{function}] [-u @var{function}] [-r @var{keyseq}] -bind [-m @var{keymap}] -f @var{filename} -bind [-m @var{keymap}] -x @var{keyseq:shell-command} -bind [-m @var{keymap}] @var{keyseq:function-name} -bind @var{readline-command} -@end example - -Display current Readline (@pxref{Command Line Editing}) -key and function bindings, -bind a key sequence to a Readline function or macro, -or set a Readline variable. -Each non-option argument is a command as it would appear in a -Readline initialization file (@pxref{Readline Init File}), -but each binding or command must be passed as a separate argument; e.g., -@samp{"\C-x\C-r":re-read-init-file}. - -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -m @var{keymap} -Use @var{keymap} as the keymap to be affected by -the subsequent bindings. Acceptable @var{keymap} -names are -@code{emacs}, -@code{emacs-standard}, -@code{emacs-meta}, -@code{emacs-ctlx}, -@code{vi}, -@code{vi-move}, -@code{vi-command}, and -@code{vi-insert}. -@code{vi} is equivalent to @code{vi-command}; -@code{emacs} is equivalent to @code{emacs-standard}. - -@item -l -List the names of all Readline functions. - -@item -p -Display Readline function names and bindings in such a way that they -can be used as input or in a Readline initialization file. - -@item -P -List current Readline function names and bindings. - -@item -v -Display Readline variable names and values in such a way that they -can be used as input or in a Readline initialization file. - -@item -V -List current Readline variable names and values. - -@item -s -Display Readline key sequences bound to macros and the strings they output -in such a way that they can be used as input or in a Readline -initialization file. - -@item -S -Display Readline key sequences bound to macros and the strings they output. - -@item -f @var{filename} -Read key bindings from @var{filename}. - -@item -q @var{function} -Query about which keys invoke the named @var{function}. - -@item -u @var{function} -Unbind all keys bound to the named @var{function}. - -@item -r @var{keyseq} -Remove any current binding for @var{keyseq}. - -@item -x @var{keyseq:shell-command} -Cause @var{shell-command} to be executed whenever @var{keyseq} is -entered. -When @var{shell-command} is executed, the shell sets the -@code{READLINE_LINE} variable to the contents of the Readline line -buffer and the @code{READLINE_POINT} variable to the current location -of the insertion point. -If the executed command changes the value of @code{READLINE_LINE} or -@code{READLINE_POINT}, those new values will be reflected in the -editing state. - -@item -X -List all key sequences bound to shell commands and the associated commands -in a format that can be reused as input. -@end table - -@noindent -The return status is zero unless an invalid option is supplied or an -error occurs. - -@item builtin -@btindex builtin -@example -builtin [@var{shell-builtin} [@var{args}]] -@end example - -Run a shell builtin, passing it @var{args}, and return its exit status. -This is useful when defining a shell function with the same -name as a shell builtin, retaining the functionality of the builtin within -the function. -The return status is non-zero if @var{shell-builtin} is not a shell -builtin command. - -@item caller -@btindex caller -@example -caller [@var{expr}] -@end example - -Returns the context of any active subroutine call (a shell function or -a script executed with the @code{.} or @code{source} builtins). - -Without @var{expr}, @code{caller} displays the line number and source -filename of the current subroutine call. -If a non-negative integer is supplied as @var{expr}, @code{caller} -displays the line number, subroutine name, and source file corresponding -to that position in the current execution call stack. This extra -information may be used, for example, to print a stack trace. The -current frame is frame 0. - -The return value is 0 unless the shell is not executing a subroutine -call or @var{expr} does not correspond to a valid position in the -call stack. - -@item command -@btindex command -@example -command [-pVv] @var{command} [@var{arguments} @dots{}] -@end example - -Runs @var{command} with @var{arguments} ignoring any shell function -named @var{command}. -Only shell builtin commands or commands found by searching the -@env{PATH} are executed. -If there is a shell function named @code{ls}, running @samp{command ls} -within the function will execute the external command @code{ls} -instead of calling the function recursively. -The @option{-p} option means to use a default value for @env{PATH} -that is guaranteed to find all of the standard utilities. -The return status in this case is 127 if @var{command} cannot be -found or an error occurred, and the exit status of @var{command} -otherwise. - -If either the @option{-V} or @option{-v} option is supplied, a -description of @var{command} is printed. The @option{-v} option -causes a single word indicating the command or file name used to -invoke @var{command} to be displayed; the @option{-V} option produces -a more verbose description. In this case, the return status is -zero if @var{command} is found, and non-zero if not. - -@item declare -@btindex declare -@example -declare [-aAfFgilnrtux] [-p] [@var{name}[=@var{value}] @dots{}] -@end example - -Declare variables and give them attributes. If no @var{name}s -are given, then display the values of variables instead. - -The @option{-p} option will display the attributes and values of each -@var{name}. -When @option{-p} is used with @var{name} arguments, additional options, -other than @option{-f} and @option{-F}, are ignored. - -When @option{-p} is supplied without @var{name} arguments, @code{declare} -will display the attributes and values of all variables having the -attributes specified by the additional options. -If no other options are supplied with @option{-p}, @code{declare} will -display the attributes and values of all shell variables. The @option{-f} -option will restrict the display to shell functions. - -The @option{-F} option inhibits the display of function definitions; -only the function name and attributes are printed. -If the @code{extdebug} shell option is enabled using @code{shopt} -(@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), the source file name and line number where -the function is defined are displayed as well. -@option{-F} implies @option{-f}. - -The @option{-g} option forces variables to be created or modified at -the global scope, even when @code{declare} is executed in a shell function. -It is ignored in all other cases. - -The following options can be used to restrict output to variables with -the specified attributes or to give variables attributes: - -@table @code -@item -a -Each @var{name} is an indexed array variable (@pxref{Arrays}). - -@item -A -Each @var{name} is an associative array variable (@pxref{Arrays}). - -@item -f -Use function names only. - -@item -i -The variable is to be treated as -an integer; arithmetic evaluation (@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}) is -performed when the variable is assigned a value. - -@item -l -When the variable is assigned a value, all upper-case characters are -converted to lower-case. -The upper-case attribute is disabled. - -@item -n -Give each @var{name} the @var{nameref} attribute, making -it a name reference to another variable. -That other variable is defined by the value of @var{name}. -All references and assignments to @var{name}, except for changing the -@option{-n} attribute itself, are performed on the variable referenced by -@var{name}'s value. -The @option{-n} attribute cannot be applied to array variables. - -@item -r -Make @var{name}s readonly. These names cannot then be assigned values -by subsequent assignment statements or unset. - -@item -t -Give each @var{name} the @code{trace} attribute. -Traced functions inherit the @code{DEBUG} and @code{RETURN} traps from -the calling shell. -The trace attribute has no special meaning for variables. - -@item -u -When the variable is assigned a value, all lower-case characters are -converted to upper-case. -The lower-case attribute is disabled. - -@item -x -Mark each @var{name} for export to subsequent commands via -the environment. -@end table - -Using @samp{+} instead of @samp{-} turns off the attribute instead, -with the exceptions that @samp{+a} -may not be used to destroy an array variable and @samp{+r} will not -remove the readonly attribute. -When used in a function, @code{declare} makes each @var{name} local, -as with the @code{local} command, unless the @option{-g} option is used. -If a variable name is followed by =@var{value}, the value of the variable -is set to @var{value}. - -The return status is zero unless an invalid option is encountered, -an attempt is made to define a function using @samp{-f foo=bar}, -an attempt is made to assign a value to a readonly variable, -an attempt is made to assign a value to an array variable without -using the compound assignment syntax (@pxref{Arrays}), -one of the @var{names} is not a valid shell variable name, -an attempt is made to turn off readonly status for a readonly variable, -an attempt is made to turn off array status for an array variable, -or an attempt is made to display a non-existent function with @option{-f}. - -@item echo -@btindex echo -@example -echo [-neE] [@var{arg} @dots{}] -@end example - -Output the @var{arg}s, separated by spaces, terminated with a -newline. -The return status is 0 unless a write error occurs. -If @option{-n} is specified, the trailing newline is suppressed. -If the @option{-e} option is given, interpretation of the following -backslash-escaped characters is enabled. -The @option{-E} option disables the interpretation of these escape characters, -even on systems where they are interpreted by default. -The @code{xpg_echo} shell option may be used to -dynamically determine whether or not @code{echo} expands these -escape characters by default. -@code{echo} does not interpret @option{--} to mean the end of options. - -@code{echo} interprets the following escape sequences: -@table @code -@item \a -alert (bell) -@item \b -backspace -@item \c -suppress further output -@item \e -@itemx \E -escape -@item \f -form feed -@item \n -new line -@item \r -carriage return -@item \t -horizontal tab -@item \v -vertical tab -@item \\ -backslash -@item \0@var{nnn} -the eight-bit character whose value is the octal value @var{nnn} -(zero to three octal digits) -@item \x@var{HH} -the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal value @var{HH} -(one or two hex digits) -@item \u@var{HHHH} -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -@var{HHHH} (one to four hex digits) -@item \U@var{HHHHHHHH} -the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is the hexadecimal value -@var{HHHHHHHH} (one to eight hex digits) -@end table - -@item enable -@btindex enable -@example -enable [-a] [-dnps] [-f @var{filename}] [@var{name} @dots{}] -@end example - -Enable and disable builtin shell commands. -Disabling a builtin allows a disk command which has the same name -as a shell builtin to be executed without specifying a full pathname, -even though the shell normally searches for builtins before disk commands. -If @option{-n} is used, the @var{name}s become disabled. Otherwise -@var{name}s are enabled. For example, to use the @code{test} binary -found via @env{$PATH} instead of the shell builtin version, type -@samp{enable -n test}. - -If the @option{-p} option is supplied, or no @var{name} arguments appear, -a list of shell builtins is printed. With no other arguments, the list -consists of all enabled shell builtins. -The @option{-a} option means to list -each builtin with an indication of whether or not it is enabled. - -The @option{-f} option means to load the new builtin command @var{name} -from shared object @var{filename}, on systems that support dynamic loading. -The @option{-d} option will delete a builtin loaded with @option{-f}. - -If there are no options, a list of the shell builtins is displayed. -The @option{-s} option restricts @code{enable} to the @sc{posix} special -builtins. If @option{-s} is used with @option{-f}, the new builtin becomes -a special builtin (@pxref{Special Builtins}). - -The return status is zero unless a @var{name} is not a shell builtin -or there is an error loading a new builtin from a shared object. - -@item help -@btindex help -@example -help [-dms] [@var{pattern}] -@end example - -Display helpful information about builtin commands. -If @var{pattern} is specified, @code{help} gives detailed help -on all commands matching @var{pattern}, otherwise a list of -the builtins is printed. - -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -d -Display a short description of each @var{pattern} -@item -m -Display the description of each @var{pattern} in a manpage-like format -@item -s -Display only a short usage synopsis for each @var{pattern} -@end table - -The return status is zero unless no command matches @var{pattern}. - -@item let -@btindex let -@example -let @var{expression} [@var{expression} @dots{}] -@end example - -The @code{let} builtin allows arithmetic to be performed on shell -variables. Each @var{expression} is evaluated according to the -rules given below in @ref{Shell Arithmetic}. If the -last @var{expression} evaluates to 0, @code{let} returns 1; -otherwise 0 is returned. - -@item local -@btindex local -@example -local [@var{option}] @var{name}[=@var{value}] @dots{} -@end example - -For each argument, a local variable named @var{name} is created, -and assigned @var{value}. -The @var{option} can be any of the options accepted by @code{declare}. -@code{local} can only be used within a function; it makes the variable -@var{name} have a visible scope restricted to that function and its -children. The return status is zero unless @code{local} is used outside -a function, an invalid @var{name} is supplied, or @var{name} is a -readonly variable. - -@item logout -@btindex logout -@example -logout [@var{n}] -@end example - -Exit a login shell, returning a status of @var{n} to the shell's -parent. - -@item mapfile -@btindex mapfile -@example -mapfile [-n @var{count}] [-O @var{origin}] [-s @var{count}] [-t] [-u @var{fd}] - [-C @var{callback}] [-c @var{quantum}] [@var{array}] -@end example - -Read lines from the standard input into the indexed array variable @var{array}, -or from file descriptor @var{fd} -if the @option{-u} option is supplied. -The variable @code{MAPFILE} is the default @var{array}. -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: - -@table @code - -@item -n -Copy at most @var{count} lines. If @var{count} is 0, all lines are copied. -@item -O -Begin assigning to @var{array} at index @var{origin}. -The default index is 0. -@item -s -Discard the first @var{count} lines read. -@item -t -Remove a trailing newline from each line read. -@item -u -Read lines from file descriptor @var{fd} instead of the standard input. -@item -C -Evaluate @var{callback} each time @var{quantum}P lines are read. -The @option{-c} option specifies @var{quantum}. -@item -c -Specify the number of lines read between each call to @var{callback}. -@end table - -If @option{-C} is specified without @option{-c}, -the default quantum is 5000. -When @var{callback} is evaluated, it is supplied the index of the next -array element to be assigned and the line to be assigned to that element -as additional arguments. -@var{callback} is evaluated after the line is read but before the -array element is assigned. - -If not supplied with an explicit origin, @code{mapfile} will clear @var{array} -before assigning to it. - -@code{mapfile} returns successfully unless an invalid option or option -argument is supplied, @var{array} is invalid or unassignable, or @var{array} -is not an indexed array. - -@item printf -@btindex printf -@example -printf [-v @var{var}] @var{format} [@var{arguments}] -@end example - -Write the formatted @var{arguments} to the standard output under the -control of the @var{format}. -The @option{-v} option causes the output to be assigned to the variable -@var{var} rather than being printed to the standard output. - -The @var{format} is a character string which contains three types of objects: -plain characters, which are simply copied to standard output, character -escape sequences, which are converted and copied to the standard output, and -format specifications, each of which causes printing of the next successive -@var{argument}. -In addition to the standard @code{printf(1)} formats, @code{printf} -interprets the following extensions: - -@table @code -@item %b -Causes @code{printf} to expand backslash escape sequences in the -corresponding @var{argument}, -except that @samp{\c} terminates output, backslashes in -@samp{\'}, @samp{\"}, and @samp{\?} are not removed, and octal escapes -beginning with @samp{\0} may contain up to four digits. -@item %q -Causes @code{printf} to output the -corresponding @var{argument} in a format that can be reused as shell input. -@item %(@var{datefmt})T -Causes @code{printf} to output the date-time string resulting from using -@var{datefmt} as a format string for @code{strftime}(3). -The corresponding @var{argument} is an integer representing the number of -seconds since the epoch. -Two special argument values may be used: -1 represents the current -time, and -2 represents the time the shell was invoked. -If no argument is specified, conversion behaves as if -1 had been given. -This is an exception to the usual @code{printf} behavior. -@end table - -@noindent -Arguments to non-string format specifiers are treated as C language constants, -except that a leading plus or minus sign is allowed, and if the leading -character is a single or double quote, the value is the ASCII value of -the following character. - -The @var{format} is reused as necessary to consume all of the @var{arguments}. -If the @var{format} requires more @var{arguments} than are supplied, the -extra format specifications behave as if a zero value or null string, as -appropriate, had been supplied. The return value is zero on success, -non-zero on failure. - -@item read -@btindex read -@example -read [-ers] [-a @var{aname}] [-d @var{delim}] [-i @var{text}] [-n @var{nchars}] - [-N @var{nchars}] [-p @var{prompt}] [-t @var{timeout}] [-u @var{fd}] [@var{name} @dots{}] -@end example - -One line is read from the standard input, or from the file descriptor -@var{fd} supplied as an argument to the @option{-u} option, and the first word -is assigned to the first @var{name}, the second word to the second @var{name}, -and so on, with leftover words and their intervening separators assigned -to the last @var{name}. -If there are fewer words read from the input stream than names, -the remaining names are assigned empty values. -The characters in the value of the @env{IFS} variable -are used to split the line into words using the same rules the shell -uses for expansion (described above in @ref{Word Splitting}). -The backslash character @samp{\} may be used to remove any special -meaning for the next character read and for line continuation. -If no names are supplied, the line read is assigned to the -variable @env{REPLY}. -The return code is zero, unless end-of-file is encountered, @code{read} -times out (in which case the return code is greater than 128), -a variable assignment error (such as assigning to a readonly variable) occurs, -or an invalid file descriptor is supplied as the argument to @option{-u}. - -Options, if supplied, have the following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -a @var{aname} -The words are assigned to sequential indices of the array variable -@var{aname}, starting at 0. -All elements are removed from @var{aname} before the assignment. -Other @var{name} arguments are ignored. - -@item -d @var{delim} -The first character of @var{delim} is used to terminate the input line, -rather than newline. - -@item -e -Readline (@pxref{Command Line Editing}) is used to obtain the line. -Readline uses the current (or default, if line editing was not previously -active) editing settings. - -@item -i @var{text} -If Readline is being used to read the line, @var{text} is placed into -the editing buffer before editing begins. - -@item -n @var{nchars} -@code{read} returns after reading @var{nchars} characters rather than -waiting for a complete line of input, but honor a delimiter if fewer -than @var{nchars} characters are read before the delimiter. - -@item -N @var{nchars} -@code{read} returns after reading exactly @var{nchars} characters rather -than waiting for a complete line of input, unless EOF is encountered or -@code{read} times out. -Delimiter characters encountered in the input are -not treated specially and do not cause @code{read} to return until -@var{nchars} characters are read. - -@item -p @var{prompt} -Display @var{prompt}, without a trailing newline, before attempting -to read any input. -The prompt is displayed only if input is coming from a terminal. - -@item -r -If this option is given, backslash does not act as an escape character. -The backslash is considered to be part of the line. -In particular, a backslash-newline pair may not be used as a line -continuation. - -@item -s -Silent mode. If input is coming from a terminal, characters are -not echoed. - -@item -t @var{timeout} -Cause @code{read} to time out and return failure if a complete line of -input (or a specified number of characters) -is not read within @var{timeout} seconds. -@var{timeout} may be a decimal number with a fractional portion following -the decimal point. -This option is only effective if @code{read} is reading input from a -terminal, pipe, or other special file; it has no effect when reading -from regular files. -If @code{read} times out, @code{read} saves any partial input read into -the specified variable @var{name}. -If @var{timeout} is 0, @code{read} returns immediately, without trying to -read and data. The exit status is 0 if input is available on -the specified file descriptor, non-zero otherwise. -The exit status is greater than 128 if the timeout is exceeded. - -@item -u @var{fd} -Read input from file descriptor @var{fd}. -@end table - -@item readarray -@btindex readarray -@example -readarray [-n @var{count}] [-O @var{origin}] [-s @var{count}] [-t] [-u @var{fd}] - [-C @var{callback}] [-c @var{quantum}] [@var{array}] -@end example - -Read lines from the standard input into the indexed array variable @var{array}, -or from file descriptor @var{fd} -if the @option{-u} option is supplied. - -A synonym for @code{mapfile}. - -@item source -@btindex source -@example -source @var{filename} -@end example - -A synonym for @code{.} (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item type -@btindex type -@example -type [-afptP] [@var{name} @dots{}] -@end example - -For each @var{name}, indicate how it would be interpreted if used as a -command name. - -If the @option{-t} option is used, @code{type} prints a single word -which is one of @samp{alias}, @samp{function}, @samp{builtin}, -@samp{file} or @samp{keyword}, -if @var{name} is an alias, shell function, shell builtin, -disk file, or shell reserved word, respectively. -If the @var{name} is not found, then nothing is printed, and -@code{type} returns a failure status. - -If the @option{-p} option is used, @code{type} either returns the name -of the disk file that would be executed, or nothing if @option{-t} -would not return @samp{file}. - -The @option{-P} option forces a path search for each @var{name}, even if -@option{-t} would not return @samp{file}. - -If a command is hashed, @option{-p} and @option{-P} print the hashed value, -which is not necessarily the file that appears first in @code{$PATH}. - -If the @option{-a} option is used, @code{type} returns all of the places -that contain an executable named @var{file}. -This includes aliases and functions, if and only if the @option{-p} option -is not also used. - -If the @option{-f} option is used, @code{type} does not attempt to find -shell functions, as with the @code{command} builtin. - -The return status is zero if all of the @var{names} are found, non-zero -if any are not found. - -@item typeset -@btindex typeset -@example -typeset [-afFgrxilnrtux] [-p] [@var{name}[=@var{value}] @dots{}] -@end example - -The @code{typeset} command is supplied for compatibility with the Korn -shell. -It is a synonym for the @code{declare} builtin command. - -@item ulimit -@btindex ulimit -@example -ulimit [-abcdefilmnpqrstuvxHST] [@var{limit}] -@end example - -@code{ulimit} provides control over the resources available to processes -started by the shell, on systems that allow such control. If an -option is given, it is interpreted as follows: - -@table @code -@item -S -Change and report the soft limit associated with a resource. - -@item -H -Change and report the hard limit associated with a resource. - -@item -a -All current limits are reported. - -@item -b -The maximum socket buffer size. - -@item -c -The maximum size of core files created. - -@item -d -The maximum size of a process's data segment. - -@item -e -The maximum scheduling priority ("nice"). - -@item -f -The maximum size of files written by the shell and its children. - -@item -i -The maximum number of pending signals. - -@item -l -The maximum size that may be locked into memory. - -@item -m -The maximum resident set size (many systems do not honor this limit). - -@item -n -The maximum number of open file descriptors (most systems do not -allow this value to be set). - -@item -p -The pipe buffer size. - -@item -q -The maximum number of bytes in POSIX message queues. - -@item -r -The maximum real-time scheduling priority. - -@item -s -The maximum stack size. - -@item -t -The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds. - -@item -u -The maximum number of processes available to a single user. - -@item -v -The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the shell, and, on -some systems, to its children. - -@item -x -The maximum number of file locks. - -@item -T -The maximum number of threads. -@end table - -If @var{limit} is given, and the @option{-a} option is not used, -@var{limit} is the new value of the specified resource. -The special @var{limit} values @code{hard}, @code{soft}, and -@code{unlimited} stand for the current hard limit, the current soft limit, -and no limit, respectively. -A hard limit cannot be increased by a non-root user once it is set; -a soft limit may be increased up to the value of the hard limit. -Otherwise, the current value of the soft limit for the specified resource -is printed, unless the @option{-H} option is supplied. -When setting new limits, if neither @option{-H} nor @option{-S} is supplied, -both the hard and soft limits are set. -If no option is given, then @option{-f} is assumed. Values are in 1024-byte -increments, except for @option{-t}, which is in seconds; @option{-p}, -which is in units of 512-byte blocks; and @option{-T}, @option{-b}, -@option{-n} and @option{-u}, which are unscaled values. - -The return status is zero unless an invalid option or argument is supplied, -or an error occurs while setting a new limit. - -@item unalias -@btindex unalias -@example -unalias [-a] [@var{name} @dots{} ] -@end example - -Remove each @var{name} from the list of aliases. If @option{-a} is -supplied, all aliases are removed. -Aliases are described in @ref{Aliases}. -@end table - -@node Modifying Shell Behavior -@section Modifying Shell Behavior - -@menu -* The Set Builtin:: Change the values of shell attributes and - positional parameters. -* The Shopt Builtin:: Modify shell optional behavior. -@end menu - -@node The Set Builtin -@subsection The Set Builtin - -This builtin is so complicated that it deserves its own section. @code{set} -allows you to change the values of shell options and set the positional -parameters, or to display the names and values of shell variables. - -@table @code -@item set -@btindex set -@example -set [--abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT] [-o @var{option-name}] [@var{argument} @dots{}] -set [+abefhkmnptuvxBCEHPT] [+o @var{option-name}] [@var{argument} @dots{}] -@end example - -If no options or arguments are supplied, @code{set} displays the names -and values of all shell variables and functions, sorted according to the -current locale, in a format that may be reused as input -for setting or resetting the currently-set variables. -Read-only variables cannot be reset. -In @sc{posix} mode, only shell variables are listed. - -When options are supplied, they set or unset shell attributes. -Options, if specified, have the following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -a -Mark variables and function which are modified or created for export -to the environment of subsequent commands. - -@item -b -Cause the status of terminated background jobs to be reported -immediately, rather than before printing the next primary prompt. - -@item -e -Exit immediately if -a pipeline (@pxref{Pipelines}), which may consist of a single simple command -(@pxref{Simple Commands}), -a list (@pxref{Lists}), -or a compound command (@pxref{Compound Commands}) -returns a non-zero status. -The shell does not exit if the command that fails is part of the -command list immediately following a @code{while} or @code{until} keyword, -part of the test in an @code{if} statement, -part of any command executed in a @code{&&} or @code{||} list except -the command following the final @code{&&} or @code{||}, -any command in a pipeline but the last, -or if the command's return status is being inverted with @code{!}. -If a compound command other than a subshell -returns a non-zero status because a command failed -while @option{-e} was being ignored, the shell does not exit. -A trap on @code{ERR}, if set, is executed before the shell exits. - -This option applies to the shell environment and each subshell environment -separately (@pxref{Command Execution Environment}), and may cause -subshells to exit before executing all the commands in the subshell. - -If a compound command or shell function executes in a context where -@option{-e} is being ignored, -none of the commands executed within the compound command or function body -will be affected by the @option{-e} setting, even if @option{-e} is set -and a command returns a failure status. -If a compound command or shell function sets @option{-e} while executing in -a context where @option{-e} is ignored, that setting will not have any -effect until the compound command or the command containing the function -call completes. - -@item -f -Disable filename expansion (globbing). - -@item -h -Locate and remember (hash) commands as they are looked up for execution. -This option is enabled by default. - -@item -k -All arguments in the form of assignment statements are placed -in the environment for a command, not just those that precede -the command name. - -@item -m -Job control is enabled (@pxref{Job Control}). -All processes run in a separate process group. -When a background job completes, the shell prints a line -containing its exit status. - -@item -n -Read commands but do not execute them; this may be used to check a -script for syntax errors. -This option is ignored by interactive shells. - -@item -o @var{option-name} - -Set the option corresponding to @var{option-name}: - -@table @code -@item allexport -Same as @code{-a}. - -@item braceexpand -Same as @code{-B}. - -@item emacs -Use an @code{emacs}-style line editing interface (@pxref{Command Line Editing}). -This also affects the editing interface used for @code{read -e}. - -@item errexit -Same as @code{-e}. - -@item errtrace -Same as @code{-E}. - -@item functrace -Same as @code{-T}. - -@item hashall -Same as @code{-h}. - -@item histexpand -Same as @code{-H}. - -@item history -Enable command history, as described in @ref{Bash History Facilities}. -This option is on by default in interactive shells. - -@item ignoreeof -An interactive shell will not exit upon reading EOF. - -@item keyword -Same as @code{-k}. - -@item monitor -Same as @code{-m}. - -@item noclobber -Same as @code{-C}. - -@item noexec -Same as @code{-n}. - -@item noglob -Same as @code{-f}. - -@item nolog -Currently ignored. - -@item notify -Same as @code{-b}. - -@item nounset -Same as @code{-u}. - -@item onecmd -Same as @code{-t}. - -@item physical -Same as @code{-P}. - -@item pipefail -If set, the return value of a pipeline is the value of the last -(rightmost) command to exit with a non-zero status, or zero if all -commands in the pipeline exit successfully. -This option is disabled by default. - -@item posix -Change the behavior of Bash where the default operation differs -from the @sc{posix} standard to match the standard -(@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}). -This is intended to make Bash behave as a strict superset of that -standard. - -@item privileged -Same as @code{-p}. - -@item verbose -Same as @code{-v}. - -@item vi -Use a @code{vi}-style line editing interface. -This also affects the editing interface used for @code{read -e}. - -@item xtrace -Same as @code{-x}. -@end table - -@item -p -Turn on privileged mode. -In this mode, the @env{$BASH_ENV} and @env{$ENV} files are not -processed, shell functions are not inherited from the environment, -and the @env{SHELLOPTS}, @env{BASHOPTS}, @env{CDPATH} and @env{GLOBIGNORE} -variables, if they appear in the environment, are ignored. -If the shell is started with the effective user (group) id not equal to the -real user (group) id, and the @option{-p} option is not supplied, these actions -are taken and the effective user id is set to the real user id. -If the @option{-p} option is supplied at startup, the effective user id is -not reset. -Turning this option off causes the effective user -and group ids to be set to the real user and group ids. - -@item -t -Exit after reading and executing one command. - -@item -u -Treat unset variables and parameters other than the special parameters -@samp{@@} or @samp{*} as an error when performing parameter expansion. -An error message will be written to the standard error, and a non-interactive -shell will exit. - -@item -v -Print shell input lines as they are read. - -@item -x -Print a trace of simple commands, @code{for} commands, @code{case} -commands, @code{select} commands, and arithmetic @code{for} commands -and their arguments or associated word lists after they are -expanded and before they are executed. The value of the @env{PS4} -variable is expanded and the resultant value is printed before -the command and its expanded arguments. - -@item -B -The shell will perform brace expansion (@pxref{Brace Expansion}). -This option is on by default. - -@item -C -Prevent output redirection using @samp{>}, @samp{>&}, and @samp{<>} -from overwriting existing files. - -@item -E -If set, any trap on @code{ERR} is inherited by shell functions, command -substitutions, and commands executed in a subshell environment. -The @code{ERR} trap is normally not inherited in such cases. - -@item -H -Enable @samp{!} style history substitution (@pxref{History Interaction}). -This option is on by default for interactive shells. - -@item -P -If set, do not resolve symbolic links when performing commands such as -@code{cd} which change the current directory. The physical directory -is used instead. By default, Bash follows -the logical chain of directories when performing commands -which change the current directory. - -For example, if @file{/usr/sys} is a symbolic link to @file{/usr/local/sys} -then: -@example -$ cd /usr/sys; echo $PWD -/usr/sys -$ cd ..; pwd -/usr -@end example - -@noindent -If @code{set -P} is on, then: -@example -$ cd /usr/sys; echo $PWD -/usr/local/sys -$ cd ..; pwd -/usr/local -@end example - -@item -T -If set, any trap on @code{DEBUG} and @code{RETURN} are inherited by -shell functions, command substitutions, and commands executed -in a subshell environment. -The @code{DEBUG} and @code{RETURN} traps are normally not inherited -in such cases. - -@item -- -If no arguments follow this option, then the positional parameters are -unset. Otherwise, the positional parameters are set to the -@var{arguments}, even if some of them begin with a @samp{-}. - -@item - -Signal the end of options, cause all remaining @var{arguments} -to be assigned to the positional parameters. The @option{-x} -and @option{-v} options are turned off. -If there are no arguments, the positional parameters remain unchanged. -@end table - -Using @samp{+} rather than @samp{-} causes these options to be -turned off. The options can also be used upon invocation of the -shell. The current set of options may be found in @code{$-}. - -The remaining N @var{arguments} are positional parameters and are -assigned, in order, to @code{$1}, @code{$2}, @dots{} @code{$N}. -The special parameter @code{#} is set to N. - -The return status is always zero unless an invalid option is supplied. -@end table - -@node The Shopt Builtin -@subsection The Shopt Builtin - -This builtin allows you to change additional shell optional behavior. - -@table @code - -@item shopt -@btindex shopt -@example -shopt [-pqsu] [-o] [@var{optname} @dots{}] -@end example - -Toggle the values of settings controlling optional shell behavior. -The settings can be either those listed below, or, if the -@option{-o} option is used, those available with the @option{-o} -option to the @code{set} builtin command (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -With no options, or with the @option{-p} option, a list of all settable -options is displayed, with an indication of whether or not each is set. -The @option{-p} option causes output to be displayed in a form that -may be reused as input. -Other options have the following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -s -Enable (set) each @var{optname}. - -@item -u -Disable (unset) each @var{optname}. - -@item -q -Suppresses normal output; the return status -indicates whether the @var{optname} is set or unset. -If multiple @var{optname} arguments are given with @option{-q}, -the return status is zero if all @var{optnames} are enabled; -non-zero otherwise. - -@item -o -Restricts the values of -@var{optname} to be those defined for the @option{-o} option to the -@code{set} builtin (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -@end table - -If either @option{-s} or @option{-u} -is used with no @var{optname} arguments, @code{shopt} shows only -those options which are set or unset, respectively. - -Unless otherwise noted, the @code{shopt} options are disabled (off) -by default. - -The return status when listing options is zero if all @var{optnames} -are enabled, non-zero otherwise. When setting or unsetting options, -the return status is zero unless an @var{optname} is not a valid shell -option. - -The list of @code{shopt} options is: -@table @code - -@item autocd -If set, a command name that is the name of a directory is executed as if -it were the argument to the @code{cd} command. -This option is only used by interactive shells. - -@item cdable_vars -If this is set, an argument to the @code{cd} builtin command that -is not a directory is assumed to be the name of a variable whose -value is the directory to change to. - -@item cdspell -If set, minor errors in the spelling of a directory component in a -@code{cd} command will be corrected. -The errors checked for are transposed characters, -a missing character, and a character too many. -If a correction is found, the corrected path is printed, -and the command proceeds. -This option is only used by interactive shells. - -@item checkhash -If this is set, Bash checks that a command found in the hash -table exists before trying to execute it. If a hashed command no -longer exists, a normal path search is performed. - -@item checkjobs -If set, Bash lists the status of any stopped and running jobs before -exiting an interactive shell. If any jobs are running, this causes -the exit to be deferred until a second exit is attempted without an -intervening command (@pxref{Job Control}). -The shell always postpones exiting if any jobs are stopped. - -@item checkwinsize -If set, Bash checks the window size after each command - and, if necessary, updates the values of -@env{LINES} and @env{COLUMNS}. - -@item cmdhist -If set, Bash -attempts to save all lines of a multiple-line -command in the same history entry. This allows -easy re-editing of multi-line commands. - -@item compat31 -If set, Bash -changes its behavior to that of version 3.1 with respect to quoted -arguments to the conditional command's @samp{=~} operator -and with respect to locale-specific -string comparison when using the @code{[[} -conditional command's @samp{<} and @samp{>} operators. -Bash versions prior to bash-4.1 use ASCII collation and strcmp(3); -bash-4.1 and later use the current locale's collation sequence and strcoll(3). - -@item compat32 -If set, Bash -changes its behavior to that of version 3.2 with respect to locale-specific -string comparison when using the @code{[[} -conditional command's @samp{<} and @samp{>} operators (see previous item). - -@item compat40 -If set, Bash -changes its behavior to that of version 4.0 with respect to locale-specific -string comparison when using the @code{[[} -conditional command's @samp{<} and @samp{>} operators (see description -of @code{compat31}) -and the effect of interrupting a command list. -Bash versions 4.0 and later interrupt the list as if the shell received the -interrupt; previous versions continue with the next command in the list. - -@item compat41 -If set, Bash, when in @sc{posix} mode, treats a single quote in a double-quoted -parameter expansion as a special character. The single quotes must match -(an even number) and the characters between the single quotes are considered -quoted. This is the behavior of @sc{posix} mode through version 4.1. -The default Bash behavior remains as in previous versions. - -@item compat42 -If set, Bash -does not process the replacement string in the pattern substitution word -expansion using quote removal. - -@item complete_fullquote -If set, Bash -quotes all shell metacharacters in filenames and directory names when -performing completion. -If not set, Bash -removes metacharacters such as the dollar sign from the set of -characters that will be quoted in completed filenames -when these metacharacters appear in shell variable references in words to be -completed. -This means that dollar signs in variable names that expand to directories -will not be quoted; -however, any dollar signs appearing in filenames will not be quoted, either. -This is active only when bash is using backslashes to quote completed -filenames. -This variable is set by default, which is the default Bash behavior in -versions through 4.2. - -@item direxpand -If set, Bash -replaces directory names with the results of word expansion when performing -filename completion. This changes the contents of the readline editing -buffer. -If not set, Bash attempts to preserve what the user typed. - -@item dirspell -If set, Bash -attempts spelling correction on directory names during word completion -if the directory name initially supplied does not exist. - -@item dotglob -If set, Bash includes filenames beginning with a `.' in -the results of filename expansion. - -@item execfail -If this is set, a non-interactive shell will not exit if -it cannot execute the file specified as an argument to the @code{exec} -builtin command. An interactive shell does not exit if @code{exec} -fails. - -@item expand_aliases -If set, aliases are expanded as described below under Aliases, -@ref{Aliases}. -This option is enabled by default for interactive shells. - -@item extdebug -If set, behavior intended for use by debuggers is enabled: - -@enumerate -@item -The @option{-F} option to the @code{declare} builtin (@pxref{Bash Builtins}) -displays the source file name and line number corresponding to each function -name supplied as an argument. - -@item -If the command run by the @code{DEBUG} trap returns a non-zero value, the -next command is skipped and not executed. - -@item -If the command run by the @code{DEBUG} trap returns a value of 2, and the -shell is executing in a subroutine (a shell function or a shell script -executed by the @code{.} or @code{source} builtins), a call to -@code{return} is simulated. - -@item -@code{BASH_ARGC} and @code{BASH_ARGV} are updated as described in their -descriptions (@pxref{Bash Variables}). - -@item -Function tracing is enabled: command substitution, shell functions, and -subshells invoked with @code{( @var{command} )} inherit the -@code{DEBUG} and @code{RETURN} traps. - -@item -Error tracing is enabled: command substitution, shell functions, and -subshells invoked with @code{( @var{command} )} inherit the -@code{ERR} trap. -@end enumerate - -@item extglob -If set, the extended pattern matching features described above -(@pxref{Pattern Matching}) are enabled. - -@item extquote -If set, @code{$'@var{string}'} and @code{$"@var{string}"} quoting is -performed within @code{$@{@var{parameter}@}} expansions -enclosed in double quotes. This option is enabled by default. - -@item failglob -If set, patterns which fail to match filenames during filename expansion -result in an expansion error. - -@item force_fignore -If set, the suffixes specified by the @env{FIGNORE} shell variable -cause words to be ignored when performing word completion even if -the ignored words are the only possible completions. -@xref{Bash Variables}, for a description of @env{FIGNORE}. -This option is enabled by default. - -@item globasciiranges -If set, range expressions used in pattern matching bracket expressions -(@pxref{Pattern Matching}) -behave as if in the traditional C locale when performing -comparisons. That is, the current locale's collating sequence -is not taken into account, so -@samp{b} will not collate between @samp{A} and @samp{B}, -and upper-case and lower-case ASCII characters will collate together. - -@item globstar -If set, the pattern @samp{**} used in a filename expansion context will -match all files and zero or more directories and subdirectories. -If the pattern is followed by a @samp{/}, only directories and -subdirectories match. - -@item gnu_errfmt -If set, shell error messages are written in the standard @sc{gnu} error -message format. - -@item histappend -If set, the history list is appended to the file named by the value -of the @env{HISTFILE} -variable when the shell exits, rather than overwriting the file. - -@item histreedit -If set, and Readline -is being used, a user is given the opportunity to re-edit a -failed history substitution. - -@item histverify -If set, and Readline -is being used, the results of history substitution are not immediately -passed to the shell parser. Instead, the resulting line is loaded into -the Readline editing buffer, allowing further modification. - -@item hostcomplete -If set, and Readline is being used, Bash will attempt to perform -hostname completion when a word containing a @samp{@@} is being -completed (@pxref{Commands For Completion}). This option is enabled -by default. - -@item huponexit -If set, Bash will send @code{SIGHUP} to all jobs when an interactive -login shell exits (@pxref{Signals}). - -@item interactive_comments -Allow a word beginning with @samp{#} -to cause that word and all remaining characters on that -line to be ignored in an interactive shell. -This option is enabled by default. - -@item lastpipe -If set, and job control is not active, the shell runs the last command of -a pipeline not executed in the background in the current shell environment. - -@item lithist -If enabled, and the @code{cmdhist} -option is enabled, multi-line commands are saved to the history with -embedded newlines rather than using semicolon separators where possible. - -@item login_shell -The shell sets this option if it is started as a login shell -(@pxref{Invoking Bash}). -The value may not be changed. - -@item mailwarn -If set, and a file that Bash is checking for mail has been -accessed since the last time it was checked, the message -@code{"The mail in @var{mailfile} has been read"} is displayed. - -@item no_empty_cmd_completion -If set, and Readline is being used, Bash will not attempt to search -the @env{PATH} for possible completions when completion is attempted -on an empty line. - -@item nocaseglob -If set, Bash matches filenames in a case-insensitive fashion when -performing filename expansion. - -@item nocasematch -If set, Bash matches patterns in a case-insensitive fashion when -performing matching while executing @code{case} or @code{[[} -conditional commands. - -@item nullglob -If set, Bash allows filename patterns which match no -files to expand to a null string, rather than themselves. - -@item progcomp -If set, the programmable completion facilities -(@pxref{Programmable Completion}) are enabled. -This option is enabled by default. - -@item promptvars -If set, prompt strings undergo -parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic -expansion, and quote removal after being expanded -as described below (@pxref{Controlling the Prompt}). -This option is enabled by default. - -@item restricted_shell -The shell sets this option if it is started in restricted mode -(@pxref{The Restricted Shell}). -The value may not be changed. -This is not reset when the startup files are executed, allowing -the startup files to discover whether or not a shell is restricted. - -@item shift_verbose -If this is set, the @code{shift} -builtin prints an error message when the shift count exceeds the -number of positional parameters. - -@item sourcepath -If set, the @code{source} builtin uses the value of @env{PATH} -to find the directory containing the file supplied as an argument. -This option is enabled by default. - -@item xpg_echo -If set, the @code{echo} builtin expands backslash-escape sequences -by default. - -@end table - -@noindent -The return status when listing options is zero if all @var{optnames} -are enabled, non-zero otherwise. -When setting or unsetting options, the return status is zero unless an -@var{optname} is not a valid shell option. -@end table - -@node Special Builtins -@section Special Builtins -@cindex special builtin - -For historical reasons, the @sc{posix} standard has classified -several builtin commands as @emph{special}. -When Bash is executing in @sc{posix} mode, the special builtins -differ from other builtin commands in three respects: - -@enumerate -@item -Special builtins are found before shell functions during command lookup. - -@item -If a special builtin returns an error status, a non-interactive shell exits. - -@item -Assignment statements preceding the command stay in effect in the shell -environment after the command completes. -@end enumerate - -When Bash is not executing in @sc{posix} mode, these builtins behave no -differently than the rest of the Bash builtin commands. -The Bash @sc{posix} mode is described in @ref{Bash POSIX Mode}. - -These are the @sc{posix} special builtins: -@example -@w{break : . continue eval exec exit export readonly return set} -@w{shift trap unset} -@end example - -@node Shell Variables -@chapter Shell Variables - -@menu -* Bourne Shell Variables:: Variables which Bash uses in the same way - as the Bourne Shell. -* Bash Variables:: List of variables that exist in Bash. -@end menu - -This chapter describes the shell variables that Bash uses. -Bash automatically assigns default values to a number of variables. - -@node Bourne Shell Variables -@section Bourne Shell Variables - -Bash uses certain shell variables in the same way as the Bourne shell. -In some cases, Bash assigns a default value to the variable. - -@vtable @code - -@item CDPATH -A colon-separated list of directories used as a search path for -the @code{cd} builtin command. - -@item HOME -The current user's home directory; the default for the @code{cd} builtin -command. -The value of this variable is also used by tilde expansion -(@pxref{Tilde Expansion}). - -@item IFS -A list of characters that separate fields; used when the shell splits -words as part of expansion. - -@item MAIL -If this parameter is set to a filename or directory name -and the @env{MAILPATH} variable -is not set, Bash informs the user of the arrival of mail in -the specified file or Maildir-format directory. - -@item MAILPATH -A colon-separated list of filenames which the shell periodically checks -for new mail. -Each list entry can specify the message that is printed when new mail -arrives in the mail file by separating the filename from the message with -a @samp{?}. -When used in the text of the message, @code{$_} expands to the name of -the current mail file. - -@item OPTARG -The value of the last option argument processed by the @code{getopts} builtin. - -@item OPTIND -The index of the last option argument processed by the @code{getopts} builtin. - -@item PATH -A colon-separated list of directories in which the shell looks for -commands. -A zero-length (null) directory name in the value of @code{PATH} indicates the -current directory. -A null directory name may appear as two adjacent colons, or as an initial -or trailing colon. - - -@item PS1 -The primary prompt string. The default value is @samp{\s-\v\$ }. -@xref{Controlling the Prompt}, for the complete list of escape -sequences that are expanded before @env{PS1} is displayed. - -@item PS2 -The secondary prompt string. The default value is @samp{> }. - -@end vtable - -@node Bash Variables -@section Bash Variables - -These variables are set or used by Bash, but other shells -do not normally treat them specially. - -A few variables used by Bash are described in different chapters: -variables for controlling the job control facilities -(@pxref{Job Control Variables}). - -@vtable @code - -@item BASH -The full pathname used to execute the current instance of Bash. - -@item BASHOPTS -A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in -the list is a valid argument for the @option{-s} option to the -@code{shopt} builtin command (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}). -The options appearing in @env{BASHOPTS} are those reported -as @samp{on} by @samp{shopt}. -If this variable is in the environment when Bash -starts up, each shell option in the list will be enabled before -reading any startup files. This variable is readonly. - -@item BASHPID -Expands to the process ID of the current Bash process. -This differs from @code{$$} under certain circumstances, such as subshells -that do not require Bash to be re-initialized. - -@item BASH_ALIASES -An associative array variable whose members correspond to the internal -list of aliases as maintained by the @code{alias} builtin. -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). -Elements added to this array appear in the alias list; unsetting array -elements cause aliases to be removed from the alias list. - -@item BASH_ARGC -An array variable whose values are the number of parameters in each -frame of the current bash execution call stack. The number of -parameters to the current subroutine (shell function or script executed -with @code{.} or @code{source}) is at the top of the stack. When a -subroutine is executed, the number of parameters passed is pushed onto -@code{BASH_ARGC}. -The shell sets @code{BASH_ARGC} only when in extended debugging mode -(see @ref{The Shopt Builtin} -for a description of the @code{extdebug} option to the @code{shopt} -builtin). - -@item BASH_ARGV -An array variable containing all of the parameters in the current bash -execution call stack. The final parameter of the last subroutine call -is at the top of the stack; the first parameter of the initial call is -at the bottom. When a subroutine is executed, the parameters supplied -are pushed onto @code{BASH_ARGV}. -The shell sets @code{BASH_ARGV} only when in extended debugging mode -(see @ref{The Shopt Builtin} -for a description of the @code{extdebug} option to the @code{shopt} -builtin). - -@item BASH_CMDS -An associative array variable whose members correspond to the internal -hash table of commands as maintained by the @code{hash} builtin -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). -Elements added to this array appear in the hash table; unsetting array -elements cause commands to be removed from the hash table. - -@item BASH_COMMAND -The command currently being executed or about to be executed, unless the -shell is executing a command as the result of a trap, -in which case it is the command executing at the time of the trap. - -@item BASH_COMPAT -The value is used to set the shell's compatibility level. -@xref{The Shopt Builtin}, for a description of the various compatibility -levels and their effects. -The value may be a decimal number (e.g., 4.2) or an integer (e.g., 42) -corresponding to the desired compatibility level. -If @code{BASH_COMPAT} is unset or set to the empty string, the compatibility -level is set to the default for the current version. -If @code{BASH_COMPAT} is set to a value that is not one of the valid -compatibility levels, the shell prints an error message and sets the -compatibility level to the default for the current version. -The valid compatibility levels correspond to the compatibility options -accepted by the @code{shopt} builtin described above (for example, -@var{compat42} means that 4.2 and 42 are valid values). -The current version is also a valid value. - -@item BASH_ENV -If this variable is set when Bash is invoked to execute a shell -script, its value is expanded and used as the name of a startup file -to read before executing the script. @xref{Bash Startup Files}. - -@item BASH_EXECUTION_STRING -The command argument to the @option{-c} invocation option. - -@item BASH_LINENO -An array variable whose members are the line numbers in source files -where each corresponding member of @var{FUNCNAME} was invoked. -@code{$@{BASH_LINENO[$i]@}} is the line number in the source file -(@code{$@{BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]@}}) where -@code{$@{FUNCNAME[$i]@}} was called (or @code{$@{BASH_LINENO[$i-1]@}} if -referenced within another shell function). -Use @code{LINENO} to obtain the current line number. - -@item BASH_REMATCH -An array variable whose members are assigned by the @samp{=~} binary -operator to the @code{[[} conditional command -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). -The element with index 0 is the portion of the string -matching the entire regular expression. -The element with index @var{n} is the portion of the -string matching the @var{n}th parenthesized subexpression. -This variable is read-only. - -@item BASH_SOURCE -An array variable whose members are the source filenames where the -corresponding shell function names in the @code{FUNCNAME} array -variable are defined. -The shell function @code{$@{FUNCNAME[$i]@}} is defined in the file -@code{$@{BASH_SOURCE[$i]@}} and called from @code{$@{BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]@}} - -@item BASH_SUBSHELL -Incremented by one within each subshell or subshell environment when -the shell begins executing in that environment. -The initial value is 0. - -@item BASH_VERSINFO -A readonly array variable (@pxref{Arrays}) -whose members hold version information for this instance of Bash. -The values assigned to the array members are as follows: - -@table @code - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[0] -The major version number (the @var{release}). - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[1] -The minor version number (the @var{version}). - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[2] -The patch level. - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[3] -The build version. - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[4] -The release status (e.g., @var{beta1}). - -@item BASH_VERSINFO[5] -The value of @env{MACHTYPE}. -@end table - -@item BASH_VERSION -The version number of the current instance of Bash. - -@item BASH_XTRACEFD -If set to an integer corresponding to a valid file descriptor, Bash -will write the trace output generated when @samp{set -x} -is enabled to that file descriptor. -This allows tracing output to be separated from diagnostic and error -messages. -The file descriptor is closed when @code{BASH_XTRACEFD} is unset or assigned -a new value. -Unsetting @code{BASH_XTRACEFD} or assigning it the empty string causes the -trace output to be sent to the standard error. -Note that setting @code{BASH_XTRACEFD} to 2 (the standard error file -descriptor) and then unsetting it will result in the standard error -being closed. - -@item CHILD_MAX -Set the number of exited child status values for the shell to remember. -Bash will not allow this value to be decreased below a @sc{posix}-mandated -minimum, and there is a maximum value (currently 8192) that this may -not exceed. -The minimum value is system-dependent. - -@item COLUMNS -Used by the @code{select} command to determine the terminal width -when printing selection lists. -Automatically set if the @code{checkwinsize} option is enabled -(@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), or in an interactive shell upon receipt of a -@code{SIGWINCH}. - -@item COMP_CWORD -An index into @env{$@{COMP_WORDS@}} of the word containing the current -cursor position. -This variable is available only in shell functions invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). - -@item COMP_LINE -The current command line. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). - -@item COMP_POINT -The index of the current cursor position relative to the beginning of -the current command. -If the current cursor position is at the end of the current command, -the value of this variable is equal to @code{$@{#COMP_LINE@}}. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). - -@item COMP_TYPE -Set to an integer value corresponding to the type of completion attempted -that caused a completion function to be called: -@var{TAB}, for normal completion, -@samp{?}, for listing completions after successive tabs, -@samp{!}, for listing alternatives on partial word completion, -@samp{@@}, to list completions if the word is not unmodified, -or -@samp{%}, for menu completion. -This variable is available only in shell functions and external -commands invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). - -@item COMP_KEY -The key (or final key of a key sequence) used to invoke the current -completion function. - -@item COMP_WORDBREAKS -The set of characters that the Readline library treats as word -separators when performing word completion. -If @code{COMP_WORDBREAKS} is unset, it loses its special properties, -even if it is subsequently reset. - -@item COMP_WORDS -An array variable consisting of the individual -words in the current command line. -The line is split into words as Readline would split it, using -@code{COMP_WORDBREAKS} as described above. -This variable is available only in shell functions invoked by the -programmable completion facilities (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). - -@item COMPREPLY -An array variable from which Bash reads the possible completions -generated by a shell function invoked by the programmable completion -facility (@pxref{Programmable Completion}). -Each array element contains one possible completion. - -@item COPROC -An array variable created to hold the file descriptors -for output from and input to an unnamed coprocess (@pxref{Coprocesses}). - -@item DIRSTACK -An array variable containing the current contents of the directory stack. -Directories appear in the stack in the order they are displayed by the -@code{dirs} builtin. -Assigning to members of this array variable may be used to modify -directories already in the stack, but the @code{pushd} and @code{popd} -builtins must be used to add and remove directories. -Assignment to this variable will not change the current directory. -If @env{DIRSTACK} is unset, it loses its special properties, even if -it is subsequently reset. - -@item EMACS -If Bash finds this variable in the environment when the shell -starts with value @samp{t}, it assumes that the shell is running in an -Emacs shell buffer and disables line editing. - -@item ENV -Similar to @code{BASH_ENV}; used when the shell is invoked in -@sc{posix} Mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}). - -@item EUID -The numeric effective user id of the current user. This variable -is readonly. - -@item FCEDIT -The editor used as a default by the @option{-e} option to the @code{fc} -builtin command. - -@item FIGNORE -A colon-separated list of suffixes to ignore when performing -filename completion. -A filename whose suffix matches one of the entries in -@env{FIGNORE} -is excluded from the list of matched filenames. A sample -value is @samp{.o:~} - -@item FUNCNAME -An array variable containing the names of all shell functions -currently in the execution call stack. -The element with index 0 is the name of any currently-executing -shell function. -The bottom-most element (the one with the highest index) -is @code{"main"}. -This variable exists only when a shell function is executing. -Assignments to @env{FUNCNAME} have no effect and return an error status. -If @env{FUNCNAME} is unset, it loses its special properties, even if -it is subsequently reset. - -This variable can be used with @code{BASH_LINENO} and @code{BASH_SOURCE}. -Each element of @code{FUNCNAME} has corresponding elements in -@code{BASH_LINENO} and @code{BASH_SOURCE} to describe the call stack. -For instance, @code{$@{FUNCNAME[$i]@}} was called from the file -@code{$@{BASH_SOURCE[$i+1]@}} at line number @code{$@{BASH_LINENO[$i]@}}. -The @code{caller} builtin displays the current call stack using this -information. - -@item FUNCNEST -If set to a numeric value greater than 0, defines a maximum function -nesting level. Function invocations that exceed this nesting level -will cause the current command to abort. - -@item GLOBIGNORE -A colon-separated list of patterns defining the set of filenames to -be ignored by filename expansion. -If a filename matched by a filename expansion pattern also matches one -of the patterns in @env{GLOBIGNORE}, it is removed from the list -of matches. - -@item GROUPS -An array variable containing the list of groups of which the current -user is a member. -Assignments to @env{GROUPS} have no effect and return an error status. -If @env{GROUPS} is unset, it loses its special properties, even if it is -subsequently reset. - -@item histchars -Up to three characters which control history expansion, quick -substitution, and tokenization (@pxref{History Interaction}). -The first character is the -@var{history expansion} character, that is, the character which signifies the -start of a history expansion, normally @samp{!}. The second character is the -character which signifies `quick substitution' when seen as the first -character on a line, normally @samp{^}. The optional third character is the -character which indicates that the remainder of the line is a comment when -found as the first character of a word, usually @samp{#}. The history -comment character causes history substitution to be skipped for the -remaining words on the line. It does not necessarily cause the shell -parser to treat the rest of the line as a comment. - -@item HISTCMD -The history number, or index in the history list, of the current -command. If @env{HISTCMD} is unset, it loses its special properties, -even if it is subsequently reset. - -@item HISTCONTROL -A colon-separated list of values controlling how commands are saved on -the history list. -If the list of values includes @samp{ignorespace}, lines which begin -with a space character are not saved in the history list. -A value of @samp{ignoredups} causes lines which match the previous -history entry to not be saved. -A value of @samp{ignoreboth} is shorthand for -@samp{ignorespace} and @samp{ignoredups}. -A value of @samp{erasedups} causes all previous lines matching the -current line to be removed from the history list before that line -is saved. -Any value not in the above list is ignored. -If @env{HISTCONTROL} is unset, or does not include a valid value, -all lines read by the shell parser are saved on the history list, -subject to the value of @env{HISTIGNORE}. -The second and subsequent lines of a multi-line compound command are -not tested, and are added to the history regardless of the value of -@env{HISTCONTROL}. - -@item HISTFILE -The name of the file to which the command history is saved. The -default value is @file{~/.bash_history}. - -@item HISTFILESIZE -The maximum number of lines contained in the history file. -When this variable is assigned a value, the history file is truncated, -if necessary, to contain no more than that number of lines -by removing the oldest entries. -The history file is also truncated to this size after -writing it when a shell exits. -If the value is 0, the history file is truncated to zero size. -Non-numeric values and numeric values less than zero inhibit truncation. -The shell sets the default value to the value of @env{HISTSIZE} -after reading any startup files. - -@item HISTIGNORE -A colon-separated list of patterns used to decide which command -lines should be saved on the history list. Each pattern is -anchored at the beginning of the line and must match the complete -line (no implicit @samp{*} is appended). Each pattern is tested -against the line after the checks specified by @env{HISTCONTROL} -are applied. In addition to the normal shell pattern matching -characters, @samp{&} matches the previous history line. @samp{&} -may be escaped using a backslash; the backslash is removed -before attempting a match. -The second and subsequent lines of a multi-line compound command are -not tested, and are added to the history regardless of the value of -@env{HISTIGNORE}. - -@env{HISTIGNORE} subsumes the function of @env{HISTCONTROL}. A -pattern of @samp{&} is identical to @code{ignoredups}, and a -pattern of @samp{[ ]*} is identical to @code{ignorespace}. -Combining these two patterns, separating them with a colon, -provides the functionality of @code{ignoreboth}. - -@item HISTSIZE -The maximum number of commands to remember on the history list. -If the value is 0, commands are not saved in the history list. -Numeric values less than zero result in every command being saved -on the history list (there is no limit). -The shell sets the default value to 500 after reading any startup files. - -@item HISTTIMEFORMAT -If this variable is set and not null, its value is used as a format string -for @var{strftime} to print the time stamp associated with each history -entry displayed by the @code{history} builtin. -If this variable is set, time stamps are written to the history file so -they may be preserved across shell sessions. -This uses the history comment character to distinguish timestamps from -other history lines. - -@item HOSTFILE -Contains the name of a file in the same format as @file{/etc/hosts} that -should be read when the shell needs to complete a hostname. -The list of possible hostname completions may be changed while the shell -is running; -the next time hostname completion is attempted after the -value is changed, Bash adds the contents of the new file to the -existing list. -If @env{HOSTFILE} is set, but has no value, or does not name a readable file, -Bash attempts to read -@file{/etc/hosts} to obtain the list of possible hostname completions. -When @env{HOSTFILE} is unset, the hostname list is cleared. - -@item HOSTNAME -The name of the current host. - -@item HOSTTYPE -A string describing the machine Bash is running on. - -@item IGNOREEOF -Controls the action of the shell on receipt of an @code{EOF} character -as the sole input. If set, the value denotes the number -of consecutive @code{EOF} characters that can be read as the -first character on an input line -before the shell will exit. If the variable exists but does not -have a numeric value (or has no value) then the default is 10. -If the variable does not exist, then @code{EOF} signifies the end of -input to the shell. This is only in effect for interactive shells. - -@item INPUTRC -The name of the Readline initialization file, overriding the default -of @file{~/.inputrc}. - -@item LANG -Used to determine the locale category for any category not specifically -selected with a variable starting with @code{LC_}. - -@item LC_ALL -This variable overrides the value of @env{LANG} and any other -@code{LC_} variable specifying a locale category. - -@item LC_COLLATE -This variable determines the collation order used when sorting the -results of filename expansion, and -determines the behavior of range expressions, equivalence classes, -and collating sequences within filename expansion and pattern matching -(@pxref{Filename Expansion}). - -@item LC_CTYPE -This variable determines the interpretation of characters and the -behavior of character classes within filename expansion and pattern -matching (@pxref{Filename Expansion}). - -@item LC_MESSAGES -This variable determines the locale used to translate double-quoted -strings preceded by a @samp{$} (@pxref{Locale Translation}). - -@item LC_NUMERIC -This variable determines the locale category used for number formatting. - -@item LINENO -The line number in the script or shell function currently executing. - -@item LINES -Used by the @code{select} command to determine the column length -for printing selection lists. -Automatically set if the @code{checkwinsize} option is enabled -(@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), or in an interactive shell upon receipt of a -@code{SIGWINCH}. - -@item MACHTYPE -A string that fully describes the system type on which Bash -is executing, in the standard @sc{gnu} @var{cpu-company-system} format. - -@item MAILCHECK -How often (in seconds) that the shell should check for mail in the -files specified in the @env{MAILPATH} or @env{MAIL} variables. -The default is 60 seconds. When it is time to check -for mail, the shell does so before displaying the primary prompt. -If this variable is unset, or set to a value that is not a number -greater than or equal to zero, the shell disables mail checking. - -@item MAPFILE -An array variable created to hold the text read by the -@code{mapfile} builtin when no variable name is supplied. - -@item OLDPWD -The previous working directory as set by the @code{cd} builtin. - -@item OPTERR -If set to the value 1, Bash displays error messages -generated by the @code{getopts} builtin command. - -@item OSTYPE -A string describing the operating system Bash is running on. - -@item PIPESTATUS -An array variable (@pxref{Arrays}) -containing a list of exit status values from the processes -in the most-recently-executed foreground pipeline (which may -contain only a single command). - -@item POSIXLY_CORRECT -If this variable is in the environment when Bash starts, the shell -enters @sc{posix} mode (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}) before reading the -startup files, as if the @option{--posix} invocation option had been supplied. -If it is set while the shell is running, Bash enables @sc{posix} mode, -as if the command -@example -@code{set -o posix} -@end example -@noindent -had been executed. - -@item PPID -The process @sc{id} of the shell's parent process. This variable -is readonly. - -@item PROMPT_COMMAND -If set, the value is interpreted as a command to execute -before the printing of each primary prompt (@env{$PS1}). - -@item PROMPT_DIRTRIM -If set to a number greater than zero, the value is used as the number of -trailing directory components to retain when expanding the @code{\w} and -@code{\W} prompt string escapes (@pxref{Controlling the Prompt}). -Characters removed are replaced with an ellipsis. - -@item PS3 -The value of this variable is used as the prompt for the -@code{select} command. If this variable is not set, the -@code{select} command prompts with @samp{#? } - -@item PS4 -The value is the prompt printed before the command line is echoed -when the @option{-x} option is set (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -The first character of @env{PS4} is replicated multiple times, as -necessary, to indicate multiple levels of indirection. -The default is @samp{+ }. - -@item PWD -The current working directory as set by the @code{cd} builtin. - -@item RANDOM -Each time this parameter is referenced, a random integer -between 0 and 32767 is generated. Assigning a value to this -variable seeds the random number generator. - -@item READLINE_LINE -The contents of the Readline line buffer, for use -with @samp{bind -x} (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item READLINE_POINT -The position of the insertion point in the Readline line buffer, for use -with @samp{bind -x} (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item REPLY -The default variable for the @code{read} builtin. - -@item SECONDS -This variable expands to the number of seconds since the -shell was started. Assignment to this variable resets -the count to the value assigned, and the expanded value -becomes the value assigned plus the number of seconds -since the assignment. - -@item SHELL -The full pathname to the shell is kept in this environment variable. -If it is not set when the shell starts, -Bash assigns to it the full pathname of the current user's login shell. - -@item SHELLOPTS -A colon-separated list of enabled shell options. Each word in -the list is a valid argument for the @option{-o} option to the -@code{set} builtin command (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -The options appearing in @env{SHELLOPTS} are those reported -as @samp{on} by @samp{set -o}. -If this variable is in the environment when Bash -starts up, each shell option in the list will be enabled before -reading any startup files. This variable is readonly. - -@item SHLVL -Incremented by one each time a new instance of Bash is started. This is -intended to be a count of how deeply your Bash shells are nested. - -@item TIMEFORMAT -The value of this parameter is used as a format string specifying -how the timing information for pipelines prefixed with the @code{time} -reserved word should be displayed. -The @samp{%} character introduces an -escape sequence that is expanded to a time value or other -information. -The escape sequences and their meanings are as -follows; the braces denote optional portions. - -@table @code - -@item %% -A literal @samp{%}. - -@item %[@var{p}][l]R -The elapsed time in seconds. - -@item %[@var{p}][l]U -The number of CPU seconds spent in user mode. - -@item %[@var{p}][l]S -The number of CPU seconds spent in system mode. - -@item %P -The CPU percentage, computed as (%U + %S) / %R. -@end table - -The optional @var{p} is a digit specifying the precision, the number of -fractional digits after a decimal point. -A value of 0 causes no decimal point or fraction to be output. -At most three places after the decimal point may be specified; values -of @var{p} greater than 3 are changed to 3. -If @var{p} is not specified, the value 3 is used. - -The optional @code{l} specifies a longer format, including minutes, of -the form @var{MM}m@var{SS}.@var{FF}s. -The value of @var{p} determines whether or not the fraction is included. - -If this variable is not set, Bash acts as if it had the value -@example -@code{$'\nreal\t%3lR\nuser\t%3lU\nsys\t%3lS'} -@end example -If the value is null, no timing information is displayed. -A trailing newline is added when the format string is displayed. - -@item TMOUT -If set to a value greater than zero, @code{TMOUT} is treated as the -default timeout for the @code{read} builtin (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). -The @code{select} command (@pxref{Conditional Constructs}) terminates -if input does not arrive after @code{TMOUT} seconds when input is coming -from a terminal. - -In an interactive shell, the value is interpreted as -the number of seconds to wait for a line of input after issuing -the primary prompt. -Bash -terminates after waiting for that number of seconds if a complete -line of input does not arrive. - -@item TMPDIR -If set, Bash uses its value as the name of a directory in which -Bash creates temporary files for the shell's use. - -@item UID -The numeric real user id of the current user. This variable is readonly. - -@end vtable - -@node Bash Features -@chapter Bash Features - -This chapter describes features unique to Bash. - -@menu -* Invoking Bash:: Command line options that you can give - to Bash. -* Bash Startup Files:: When and how Bash executes scripts. -* Interactive Shells:: What an interactive shell is. -* Bash Conditional Expressions:: Primitives used in composing expressions for - the @code{test} builtin. -* Shell Arithmetic:: Arithmetic on shell variables. -* Aliases:: Substituting one command for another. -* Arrays:: Array Variables. -* The Directory Stack:: History of visited directories. -* Controlling the Prompt:: Customizing the various prompt strings. -* The Restricted Shell:: A more controlled mode of shell execution. -* Bash POSIX Mode:: Making Bash behave more closely to what - the POSIX standard specifies. -@end menu - -@node Invoking Bash -@section Invoking Bash - -@example -bash [long-opt] [-ir] [-abefhkmnptuvxdBCDHP] [-o @var{option}] [-O @var{shopt_option}] [@var{argument} @dots{}] -bash [long-opt] [-abefhkmnptuvxdBCDHP] [-o @var{option}] [-O @var{shopt_option}] -c @var{string} [@var{argument} @dots{}] -bash [long-opt] -s [-abefhkmnptuvxdBCDHP] [-o @var{option}] [-O @var{shopt_option}] [@var{argument} @dots{}] -@end example - -All of the single-character options used with the @code{set} builtin -(@pxref{The Set Builtin}) can be used as options when the shell is invoked. -In addition, there are several multi-character -options that you can use. These options must appear on the command -line before the single-character options to be recognized. - -@table @code -@item --debugger -Arrange for the debugger profile to be executed before the shell -starts. Turns on extended debugging mode (see @ref{The Shopt Builtin} -for a description of the @code{extdebug} option to the @code{shopt} -builtin). - -@item --dump-po-strings -A list of all double-quoted strings preceded by @samp{$} -is printed on the standard output -in the @sc{gnu} @code{gettext} PO (portable object) file format. -Equivalent to @option{-D} except for the output format. - -@item --dump-strings -Equivalent to @option{-D}. - -@item --help -Display a usage message on standard output and exit successfully. - -@item --init-file @var{filename} -@itemx --rcfile @var{filename} -Execute commands from @var{filename} (instead of @file{~/.bashrc}) -in an interactive shell. - -@item --login -Equivalent to @option{-l}. - -@item --noediting -Do not use the @sc{gnu} Readline library (@pxref{Command Line Editing}) -to read command lines when the shell is interactive. - -@item --noprofile -Don't load the system-wide startup file @file{/etc/profile} -or any of the personal initialization files -@file{~/.bash_profile}, @file{~/.bash_login}, or @file{~/.profile} -when Bash is invoked as a login shell. - -@item --norc -Don't read the @file{~/.bashrc} initialization file in an -interactive shell. This is on by default if the shell is -invoked as @code{sh}. - -@item --posix -Change the behavior of Bash where the default operation differs -from the @sc{posix} standard to match the standard. This -is intended to make Bash behave as a strict superset of that -standard. @xref{Bash POSIX Mode}, for a description of the Bash -@sc{posix} mode. - -@item --restricted -Make the shell a restricted shell (@pxref{The Restricted Shell}). - -@item --verbose -Equivalent to @option{-v}. Print shell input lines as they're read. - -@item --version -Show version information for this instance of -Bash on the standard output and exit successfully. -@end table - -There are several single-character options that may be supplied at -invocation which are not available with the @code{set} builtin. - -@table @code -@item -c -Read and execute commands from the first non-option @var{argument} -after processing the options, then exit. -Any remaining arguments are assigned to the -positional parameters, starting with @code{$0}. - -@item -i -Force the shell to run interactively. Interactive shells are -described in @ref{Interactive Shells}. - -@item -l -Make this shell act as if it had been directly invoked by login. -When the shell is interactive, this is equivalent to starting a -login shell with @samp{exec -l bash}. -When the shell is not interactive, the login shell startup files will -be executed. -@samp{exec bash -l} or @samp{exec bash --login} -will replace the current shell with a Bash login shell. -@xref{Bash Startup Files}, for a description of the special behavior -of a login shell. - -@item -r -Make the shell a restricted shell (@pxref{The Restricted Shell}). - -@item -s -If this option is present, or if no arguments remain after option -processing, then commands are read from the standard input. -This option allows the positional parameters to be set -when invoking an interactive shell. - -@item -D -A list of all double-quoted strings preceded by @samp{$} -is printed on the standard output. -These are the strings that -are subject to language translation when the current locale -is not @code{C} or @code{POSIX} (@pxref{Locale Translation}). -This implies the @option{-n} option; no commands will be executed. - -@item [-+]O [@var{shopt_option}] -@var{shopt_option} is one of the shell options accepted by the -@code{shopt} builtin (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}). -If @var{shopt_option} is present, @option{-O} sets the value of that option; -@option{+O} unsets it. -If @var{shopt_option} is not supplied, the names and values of the shell -options accepted by @code{shopt} are printed on the standard output. -If the invocation option is @option{+O}, the output is displayed in a format -that may be reused as input. - -@item -- -A @code{--} signals the end of options and disables further option -processing. -Any arguments after the @code{--} are treated as filenames and arguments. -@end table - -@cindex login shell -A @emph{login} shell is one whose first character of argument zero is -@samp{-}, or one invoked with the @option{--login} option. - -@cindex interactive shell -An @emph{interactive} shell is one started without non-option arguments, -unless @option{-s} is specified, -without specifying the @option{-c} option, and whose input and output are both -connected to terminals (as determined by @code{isatty(3)}), or one -started with the @option{-i} option. @xref{Interactive Shells}, for more -information. - -If arguments remain after option processing, and neither the -@option{-c} nor the @option{-s} -option has been supplied, the first argument is assumed to -be the name of a file containing shell commands (@pxref{Shell Scripts}). -When Bash is invoked in this fashion, @code{$0} -is set to the name of the file, and the positional parameters -are set to the remaining arguments. -Bash reads and executes commands from this file, then exits. -Bash's exit status is the exit status of the last command executed -in the script. If no commands are executed, the exit status is 0. - -@node Bash Startup Files -@section Bash Startup Files -@cindex startup files - -This section describes how Bash executes its startup files. -If any of the files exist but cannot be read, Bash reports an error. -Tildes are expanded in filenames as described above under -Tilde Expansion (@pxref{Tilde Expansion}). - -Interactive shells are described in @ref{Interactive Shells}. - -@subsubheading Invoked as an interactive login shell, or with @option{--login} - -When Bash is invoked as an interactive login shell, or as a -non-interactive shell with the @option{--login} option, it first reads and -executes commands from the file @file{/etc/profile}, if that file exists. -After reading that file, it looks for @file{~/.bash_profile}, -@file{~/.bash_login}, and @file{~/.profile}, in that order, and reads -and executes commands from the first one that exists and is readable. -The @option{--noprofile} option may be used when the shell is started to -inhibit this behavior. - -When a login shell exits, Bash reads and executes commands from -the file @file{~/.bash_logout}, if it exists. - -@subsubheading Invoked as an interactive non-login shell - -When an interactive shell that is not a login shell is started, Bash -reads and executes commands from @file{~/.bashrc}, if that file exists. -This may be inhibited by using the @option{--norc} option. -The @option{--rcfile @var{file}} option will force Bash to read and -execute commands from @var{file} instead of @file{~/.bashrc}. - -So, typically, your @file{~/.bash_profile} contains the line -@example -@code{if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then . ~/.bashrc; fi} -@end example -@noindent -after (or before) any login-specific initializations. - -@subsubheading Invoked non-interactively - -When Bash is started non-interactively, to run a shell script, -for example, it looks for the variable @env{BASH_ENV} in the environment, -expands its value if it appears there, and uses the expanded value as -the name of a file to read and execute. Bash behaves as if the -following command were executed: -@example -@code{if [ -n "$BASH_ENV" ]; then . "$BASH_ENV"; fi} -@end example -@noindent -but the value of the @env{PATH} variable is not used to search for the -filename. - -As noted above, if a non-interactive shell is invoked with the -@option{--login} option, Bash attempts to read and execute commands from the -login shell startup files. - -@subsubheading Invoked with name @code{sh} - -If Bash is invoked with the name @code{sh}, it tries to mimic the -startup behavior of historical versions of @code{sh} as closely as -possible, while conforming to the @sc{posix} standard as well. - -When invoked as an interactive login shell, or as a non-interactive -shell with the @option{--login} option, it first attempts to read -and execute commands from @file{/etc/profile} and @file{~/.profile}, in -that order. -The @option{--noprofile} option may be used to inhibit this behavior. -When invoked as an interactive shell with the name @code{sh}, Bash -looks for the variable @env{ENV}, expands its value if it is defined, -and uses the expanded value as the name of a file to read and execute. -Since a shell invoked as @code{sh} does not attempt to read and execute -commands from any other startup files, the @option{--rcfile} option has -no effect. -A non-interactive shell invoked with the name @code{sh} does not attempt -to read any other startup files. - -When invoked as @code{sh}, Bash enters @sc{posix} mode after -the startup files are read. - -@subsubheading Invoked in @sc{posix} mode - -When Bash is started in @sc{posix} mode, as with the -@option{--posix} command line option, it follows the @sc{posix} standard -for startup files. -In this mode, interactive shells expand the @env{ENV} variable -and commands are read and executed from the file whose name is the -expanded value. -No other startup files are read. - -@subsubheading Invoked by remote shell daemon - -Bash attempts to determine when it is being run with its standard input -connected to a network connection, as when executed by the remote shell -daemon, usually @code{rshd}, or the secure shell daemon @code{sshd}. -If Bash determines it is being run in -this fashion, it reads and executes commands from @file{~/.bashrc}, if that -file exists and is readable. -It will not do this if invoked as @code{sh}. -The @option{--norc} option may be used to inhibit this behavior, and the -@option{--rcfile} option may be used to force another file to be read, but -neither @code{rshd} nor @code{sshd} generally invoke the shell with those -options or allow them to be specified. - -@subsubheading Invoked with unequal effective and real @sc{uid/gid}s - -If Bash is started with the effective user (group) id not equal to the -real user (group) id, and the @option{-p} option is not supplied, no startup -files are read, shell functions are not inherited from the environment, -the @env{SHELLOPTS}, @env{BASHOPTS}, @env{CDPATH}, and @env{GLOBIGNORE} -variables, if they appear in the environment, are ignored, and the effective -user id is set to the real user id. -If the @option{-p} option is supplied at invocation, the startup behavior is -the same, but the effective user id is not reset. - -@node Interactive Shells -@section Interactive Shells -@cindex interactive shell -@cindex shell, interactive - -@menu -* What is an Interactive Shell?:: What determines whether a shell is Interactive. -* Is this Shell Interactive?:: How to tell if a shell is interactive. -* Interactive Shell Behavior:: What changes in a interactive shell? -@end menu - -@node What is an Interactive Shell? -@subsection What is an Interactive Shell? - -An interactive shell -is one started without non-option arguments, unless @option{-s} is -specified, without specifying the @option{-c} option, and -whose input and error output are both -connected to terminals (as determined by @code{isatty(3)}), -or one started with the @option{-i} option. - -An interactive shell generally reads from and writes to a user's -terminal. - -The @option{-s} invocation option may be used to set the positional parameters -when an interactive shell is started. - -@node Is this Shell Interactive? -@subsection Is this Shell Interactive? - -To determine within a startup script whether or not Bash is -running interactively, -test the value of the @samp{-} special parameter. -It contains @code{i} when the shell is interactive. For example: - -@example -case "$-" in -*i*) echo This shell is interactive ;; -*) echo This shell is not interactive ;; -esac -@end example - -Alternatively, startup scripts may examine the variable -@env{PS1}; it is unset in non-interactive shells, and set in -interactive shells. Thus: - -@example -if [ -z "$PS1" ]; then - echo This shell is not interactive -else - echo This shell is interactive -fi -@end example - -@node Interactive Shell Behavior -@subsection Interactive Shell Behavior - -When the shell is running interactively, it changes its behavior in -several ways. - -@enumerate -@item -Startup files are read and executed as described in @ref{Bash Startup Files}. - -@item -Job Control (@pxref{Job Control}) is enabled by default. When job -control is in effect, Bash ignores the keyboard-generated job control -signals @code{SIGTTIN}, @code{SIGTTOU}, and @code{SIGTSTP}. - -@item -Bash expands and displays @env{PS1} before reading the first line -of a command, and expands and displays @env{PS2} before reading the -second and subsequent lines of a multi-line command. - -@item -Bash executes the value of the @env{PROMPT_COMMAND} variable as a command -before printing the primary prompt, @env{$PS1} -(@pxref{Bash Variables}). - -@item -Readline (@pxref{Command Line Editing}) is used to read commands from -the user's terminal. - -@item -Bash inspects the value of the @code{ignoreeof} option to @code{set -o} -instead of exiting immediately when it receives an @code{EOF} on its -standard input when reading a command (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -Command history (@pxref{Bash History Facilities}) -and history expansion (@pxref{History Interaction}) -are enabled by default. -Bash will save the command history to the file named by @env{$HISTFILE} -when a shell with history enabled exits. - -@item -Alias expansion (@pxref{Aliases}) is performed by default. - -@item -In the absence of any traps, Bash ignores @code{SIGTERM} -(@pxref{Signals}). - -@item -In the absence of any traps, @code{SIGINT} is caught and handled -((@pxref{Signals}). -@code{SIGINT} will interrupt some shell builtins. - -@item -An interactive login shell sends a @code{SIGHUP} to all jobs on exit -if the @code{huponexit} shell option has been enabled (@pxref{Signals}). - -@item -The @option{-n} invocation option is ignored, and @samp{set -n} has -no effect (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -Bash will check for mail periodically, depending on the values of the -@env{MAIL}, @env{MAILPATH}, and @env{MAILCHECK} shell variables -(@pxref{Bash Variables}). - -@item -Expansion errors due to references to unbound shell variables after -@samp{set -u} has been enabled will not cause the shell to exit -(@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -The shell will not exit on expansion errors caused by @var{var} being unset -or null in @code{$@{@var{var}:?@var{word}@}} expansions -(@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -Redirection errors encountered by shell builtins will not cause the -shell to exit. - -@item -When running in @sc{posix} mode, a special builtin returning an error -status will not cause the shell to exit (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}). - -@item -A failed @code{exec} will not cause the shell to exit -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item -Parser syntax errors will not cause the shell to exit. - -@item -Simple spelling correction for directory arguments to the @code{cd} -builtin is enabled by default (see the description of the @code{cdspell} -option to the @code{shopt} builtin in @ref{The Shopt Builtin}). - -@item -The shell will check the value of the @env{TMOUT} variable and exit -if a command is not read within the specified number of seconds after -printing @env{$PS1} (@pxref{Bash Variables}). - -@end enumerate - -@node Bash Conditional Expressions -@section Bash Conditional Expressions -@cindex expressions, conditional - -Conditional expressions are used by the @code{[[} compound command -and the @code{test} and @code{[} builtin commands. - -Expressions may be unary or binary. -Unary expressions are often used to examine the status of a file. -There are string operators and numeric comparison operators as well. -If the @var{file} argument to one of the primaries is of the form -@file{/dev/fd/@var{N}}, then file descriptor @var{N} is checked. -If the @var{file} argument to one of the primaries is one of -@file{/dev/stdin}, @file{/dev/stdout}, or @file{/dev/stderr}, file -descriptor 0, 1, or 2, respectively, is checked. - -When used with @code{[[}, the @samp{<} and @samp{>} operators sort -lexicographically using the current locale. -The @code{test} command uses ASCII ordering. - -Unless otherwise specified, primaries that operate on files follow symbolic -links and operate on the target of the link, rather than the link itself. - -@table @code -@item -a @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists. - -@item -b @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a block special file. - -@item -c @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a character special file. - -@item -d @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a directory. - -@item -e @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists. - -@item -f @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a regular file. - -@item -g @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and its set-group-id bit is set. - -@item -h @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a symbolic link. - -@item -k @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and its "sticky" bit is set. - -@item -p @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a named pipe (FIFO). - -@item -r @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is readable. - -@item -s @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and has a size greater than zero. - -@item -t @var{fd} -True if file descriptor @var{fd} is open and refers to a terminal. - -@item -u @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and its set-user-id bit is set. - -@item -w @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is writable. - -@item -x @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is executable. - -@item -G @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is owned by the effective group id. - -@item -L @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a symbolic link. - -@item -N @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and has been modified since it was last read. - -@item -O @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is owned by the effective user id. - -@item -S @var{file} -True if @var{file} exists and is a socket. - -@item @var{file1} -ef @var{file2} -True if @var{file1} and @var{file2} refer to the same device and -inode numbers. - -@item @var{file1} -nt @var{file2} -True if @var{file1} is newer (according to modification date) -than @var{file2}, or if @var{file1} exists and @var{file2} does not. - -@item @var{file1} -ot @var{file2} -True if @var{file1} is older than @var{file2}, -or if @var{file2} exists and @var{file1} does not. - -@item -o @var{optname} -True if the shell option @var{optname} is enabled. -The list of options appears in the description of the @option{-o} -option to the @code{set} builtin (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -v @var{varname} -True if the shell variable @var{varname} is set (has been assigned a value). - -@item -R @var{varname} -True if the shell variable @var{varname} is set and is a name reference. - -@item -z @var{string} -True if the length of @var{string} is zero. - -@item -n @var{string} -@itemx @var{string} -True if the length of @var{string} is non-zero. - -@item @var{string1} == @var{string2} -@itemx @var{string1} = @var{string2} -True if the strings are equal. -When used with the @code{[[} command, this performs pattern matching as -described above (@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@samp{=} should be used with the @code{test} command for @sc{posix} conformance. - -@item @var{string1} != @var{string2} -True if the strings are not equal. - -@item @var{string1} < @var{string2} -True if @var{string1} sorts before @var{string2} lexicographically. - -@item @var{string1} > @var{string2} -True if @var{string1} sorts after @var{string2} lexicographically. - -@item @var{arg1} OP @var{arg2} -@code{OP} is one of -@samp{-eq}, @samp{-ne}, @samp{-lt}, @samp{-le}, @samp{-gt}, or @samp{-ge}. -These arithmetic binary operators return true if @var{arg1} -is equal to, not equal to, less than, less than or equal to, -greater than, or greater than or equal to @var{arg2}, -respectively. @var{Arg1} and @var{arg2} -may be positive or negative integers. -@end table - -@node Shell Arithmetic -@section Shell Arithmetic -@cindex arithmetic, shell -@cindex shell arithmetic -@cindex expressions, arithmetic -@cindex evaluation, arithmetic -@cindex arithmetic evaluation - -The shell allows arithmetic expressions to be evaluated, as one of -the shell expansions or by the @code{let} and the @option{-i} option -to the @code{declare} builtins. - -Evaluation is done in fixed-width integers with no check for overflow, -though division by 0 is trapped and flagged as an error. -The operators and their precedence, associativity, and values -are the same as in the C language. -The following list of operators is grouped into levels of -equal-precedence operators. -The levels are listed in order of decreasing precedence. - -@table @code - -@item @var{id}++ @var{id}-- -variable post-increment and post-decrement - -@item ++@var{id} --@var{id} -variable pre-increment and pre-decrement - -@item - + -unary minus and plus - -@item ! ~ -logical and bitwise negation - -@item ** -exponentiation - -@item * / % -multiplication, division, remainder - -@item + - -addition, subtraction - -@item << >> -left and right bitwise shifts - -@item <= >= < > -comparison - -@item == != -equality and inequality - -@item & -bitwise AND - -@item ^ -bitwise exclusive OR - -@item | -bitwise OR - -@item && -logical AND - -@item || -logical OR - -@item expr ? expr : expr -conditional operator - -@item = *= /= %= += -= <<= >>= &= ^= |= -assignment - -@item expr1 , expr2 -comma -@end table - -Shell variables are allowed as operands; parameter expansion is -performed before the expression is evaluated. -Within an expression, shell variables may also be referenced by name -without using the parameter expansion syntax. -A shell variable that is null or unset evaluates to 0 when referenced -by name without using the parameter expansion syntax. -The value of a variable is evaluated as an arithmetic expression -when it is referenced, or when a variable which has been given the -@var{integer} attribute using @samp{declare -i} is assigned a value. -A null value evaluates to 0. -A shell variable need not have its @var{integer} attribute turned on -to be used in an expression. - -Constants with a leading 0 are interpreted as octal numbers. -A leading @samp{0x} or @samp{0X} denotes hexadecimal. Otherwise, -numbers take the form [@var{base}@code{#}]@var{n}, where the optional @var{base} -is a decimal number between 2 and 64 representing the arithmetic -base, and @var{n} is a number in that base. -If @var{base}@code{#} is omitted, then base 10 is used. -When specifying @var{n}, -he digits greater than 9 are represented by the lowercase letters, -the uppercase letters, @samp{@@}, and @samp{_}, in that order. -If @var{base} is less than or equal to 36, lowercase and uppercase -letters may be used interchangeably to represent numbers between 10 -and 35. - -Operators are evaluated in order of precedence. Sub-expressions in -parentheses are evaluated first and may override the precedence -rules above. - -@node Aliases -@section Aliases -@cindex alias expansion - -@var{Aliases} allow a string to be substituted for a word when it is used -as the first word of a simple command. -The shell maintains a list of aliases that may be set and unset with -the @code{alias} and @code{unalias} builtin commands. - -The first word of each simple command, if unquoted, is checked to see -if it has an alias. -If so, that word is replaced by the text of the alias. -The characters @samp{/}, @samp{$}, @samp{`}, @samp{=} and any of the -shell metacharacters or quoting characters listed above may not appear -in an alias name. -The replacement text may contain any valid -shell input, including shell metacharacters. -The first word of the replacement text is tested for -aliases, but a word that is identical to an alias being expanded -is not expanded a second time. -This means that one may alias @code{ls} to @code{"ls -F"}, -for instance, and Bash does not try to recursively expand the -replacement text. -If the last character of the alias value is a -@var{blank}, then the next command word following the -alias is also checked for alias expansion. - -Aliases are created and listed with the @code{alias} -command, and removed with the @code{unalias} command. - -There is no mechanism for using arguments in the replacement text, -as in @code{csh}. -If arguments are needed, a shell function should be used -(@pxref{Shell Functions}). - -Aliases are not expanded when the shell is not interactive, -unless the @code{expand_aliases} shell option is set using -@code{shopt} (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}). - -The rules concerning the definition and use of aliases are -somewhat confusing. Bash -always reads at least one complete line -of input before executing any -of the commands on that line. Aliases are expanded when a -command is read, not when it is executed. Therefore, an -alias definition appearing on the same line as another -command does not take effect until the next line of input is read. -The commands following the alias definition -on that line are not affected by the new alias. -This behavior is also an issue when functions are executed. -Aliases are expanded when a function definition is read, -not when the function is executed, because a function definition -is itself a compound command. As a consequence, aliases -defined in a function are not available until after that -function is executed. To be safe, always put -alias definitions on a separate line, and do not use @code{alias} -in compound commands. - -For almost every purpose, shell functions are preferred over aliases. - -@node Arrays -@section Arrays -@cindex arrays - -Bash provides one-dimensional indexed and associative array variables. -Any variable may be used as an indexed array; -the @code{declare} builtin will explicitly declare an array. -There is no maximum -limit on the size of an array, nor any requirement that members -be indexed or assigned contiguously. -Indexed arrays are referenced using integers (including arithmetic -expressions (@pxref{Shell Arithmetic})) and are zero-based; -associative arrays use arbitrary strings. -Unless otherwise noted, indexed array indices must be non-negative integers. - -An indexed array is created automatically if any variable is assigned to -using the syntax -@example -@var{name}[@var{subscript}]=@var{value} -@end example - -@noindent -The @var{subscript} -is treated as an arithmetic expression that must evaluate to a number. -To explicitly declare an array, use -@example -declare -a @var{name} -@end example -@noindent -The syntax -@example -declare -a @var{name}[@var{subscript}] -@end example -@noindent -is also accepted; the @var{subscript} is ignored. - -@noindent -Associative arrays are created using -@example -declare -A @var{name}. -@end example - -Attributes may be -specified for an array variable using the @code{declare} and -@code{readonly} builtins. Each attribute applies to all members of -an array. - -Arrays are assigned to using compound assignments of the form -@example -@var{name}=(@var{value1} @var{value2} @dots{} ) -@end example -@noindent -where each -@var{value} is of the form @code{[@var{subscript}]=}@var{string}. -Indexed array assignments do not require anything but @var{string}. -When assigning to indexed arrays, if -the optional subscript is supplied, that index is assigned to; -otherwise the index of the element assigned is the last index assigned -to by the statement plus one. Indexing starts at zero. - -When assigning to an associative array, the subscript is required. - -This syntax is also accepted by the @code{declare} -builtin. Individual array elements may be assigned to using the -@code{@var{name}[@var{subscript}]=@var{value}} syntax introduced above. - -When assigning to an indexed array, if @var{name} -is subscripted by a negative number, that number is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of -@var{name}, so negative indices count back from the end of the -array, and an index of -1 references the last element. - -Any element of an array may be referenced using -@code{$@{@var{name}[@var{subscript}]@}}. -The braces are required to avoid -conflicts with the shell's filename expansion operators. If the -@var{subscript} is @samp{@@} or @samp{*}, the word expands to all members -of the array @var{name}. These subscripts differ only when the word -appears within double quotes. -If the word is double-quoted, -@code{$@{@var{name}[*]@}} expands to a single word with -the value of each array member separated by the first character of the -@env{IFS} variable, and @code{$@{@var{name}[@@]@}} expands each element of -@var{name} to a separate word. When there are no array members, -@code{$@{@var{name}[@@]@}} expands to nothing. -If the double-quoted expansion occurs within a word, the expansion of -the first parameter is joined with the beginning part of the original -word, and the expansion of the last parameter is joined with the last -part of the original word. -This is analogous to the -expansion of the special parameters @samp{@@} and @samp{*}. -@code{$@{#@var{name}[@var{subscript}]@}} expands to the length of -@code{$@{@var{name}[@var{subscript}]@}}. -If @var{subscript} is @samp{@@} or -@samp{*}, the expansion is the number of elements in the array. -Referencing an array variable without a subscript is equivalent to -referencing with a subscript of 0. -If the @var{subscript} -used to reference an element of an indexed array -evaluates to a number less than zero, it is -interpreted as relative to one greater than the maximum index of the array, -so negative indices count back from the end of the array, -and an index of -1 refers to the last element. - -An array variable is considered set if a subscript has been assigned a -value. The null string is a valid value. - -It is possible to obtain the keys (indices) of an array as well as the values. -$@{!@var{name}[@@]@} and $@{!@var{name}[*]@} expand to the indices -assigned in array variable @var{name}. -The treatment when in double quotes is similar to the expansion of the -special parameters @samp{@@} and @samp{*} within double quotes. - -The @code{unset} builtin is used to destroy arrays. -@code{unset @var{name}[@var{subscript}]} -destroys the array element at index @var{subscript}. -Negative subscripts to indexed arrays are interpreted as described above. -Care must be taken to avoid unwanted side effects caused by filename -expansion. -@code{unset @var{name}}, where @var{name} is an array, removes the -entire array. A subscript of @samp{*} or @samp{@@} also removes the -entire array. - -The @code{declare}, @code{local}, and @code{readonly} -builtins each accept a @option{-a} option to specify an indexed -array and a @option{-A} option to specify an associative array. -If both options are supplied, @option{-A} takes precedence. -The @code{read} builtin accepts a @option{-a} -option to assign a list of words read from the standard input -to an array, and can read values from the standard input into -individual array elements. The @code{set} and @code{declare} -builtins display array values in a way that allows them to be -reused as input. - -@node The Directory Stack -@section The Directory Stack -@cindex directory stack - -@menu -* Directory Stack Builtins:: Bash builtin commands to manipulate - the directory stack. -@end menu - -The directory stack is a list of recently-visited directories. The -@code{pushd} builtin adds directories to the stack as it changes -the current directory, and the @code{popd} builtin removes specified -directories from the stack and changes the current directory to -the directory removed. The @code{dirs} builtin displays the contents -of the directory stack. - -The contents of the directory stack are also visible -as the value of the @env{DIRSTACK} shell variable. - -@node Directory Stack Builtins -@subsection Directory Stack Builtins - -@table @code - -@item dirs -@btindex dirs -@example -dirs [-clpv] [+@var{N} | -@var{N}] -@end example - -Display the list of currently remembered directories. Directories -are added to the list with the @code{pushd} command; the -@code{popd} command removes directories from the list. - -@table @code -@item -c -Clears the directory stack by deleting all of the elements. -@item -l -Produces a listing using full pathnames; -the default listing format uses a tilde to denote the home directory. -@item -p -Causes @code{dirs} to print the directory stack with one entry per -line. -@item -v -Causes @code{dirs} to print the directory stack with one entry per -line, prefixing each entry with its index in the stack. -@item +@var{N} -Displays the @var{N}th directory (counting from the left of the -list printed by @code{dirs} when invoked without options), starting -with zero. -@item -@var{N} -Displays the @var{N}th directory (counting from the right of the -list printed by @code{dirs} when invoked without options), starting -with zero. -@end table - -@item popd -@btindex popd -@example -popd [-n] [+@var{N} | -@var{N}] -@end example - -Remove the top entry from the directory stack, and @code{cd} -to the new top directory. -When no arguments are given, @code{popd} -removes the top directory from the stack and -performs a @code{cd} to the new top directory. The -elements are numbered from 0 starting at the first directory listed with -@code{dirs}; that is, @code{popd} is equivalent to @code{popd +0}. - -@table @code -@item -n -Suppresses the normal change of directory when removing directories -from the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. -@item +@var{N} -Removes the @var{N}th directory (counting from the left of the -list printed by @code{dirs}), starting with zero. -@item -@var{N} -Removes the @var{N}th directory (counting from the right of the -list printed by @code{dirs}), starting with zero. -@end table - -@btindex pushd -@item pushd -@example -pushd [-n] [@var{+N} | @var{-N} | @var{dir}] -@end example - -Save the current directory on the top of the directory stack -and then @code{cd} to @var{dir}. -With no arguments, @code{pushd} exchanges the top two directories. - -@table @code -@item -n -Suppresses the normal change of directory when adding directories -to the stack, so that only the stack is manipulated. -@item +@var{N} -Brings the @var{N}th directory (counting from the left of the -list printed by @code{dirs}, starting with zero) to the top of -the list by rotating the stack. -@item -@var{N} -Brings the @var{N}th directory (counting from the right of the -list printed by @code{dirs}, starting with zero) to the top of -the list by rotating the stack. -@item @var{dir} -Makes the current working directory be the top of the stack, making -it the new current directory as if it had been supplied as an argument -to the @code{cd} builtin. -@end table -@end table - -@node Controlling the Prompt -@section Controlling the Prompt -@cindex prompting - -The value of the variable @env{PROMPT_COMMAND} is examined just before -Bash prints each primary prompt. If @env{PROMPT_COMMAND} is set and -has a non-null value, then the -value is executed just as if it had been typed on the command line. - -In addition, the following table describes the special characters which -can appear in the prompt variables @env{PS1} to @env{PS4}: - -@table @code -@item \a -A bell character. -@item \d -The date, in "Weekday Month Date" format (e.g., "Tue May 26"). -@item \D@{@var{format}@} -The @var{format} is passed to @code{strftime}(3) and the result is inserted -into the prompt string; an empty @var{format} results in a locale-specific -time representation. The braces are required. -@item \e -An escape character. -@item \h -The hostname, up to the first `.'. -@item \H -The hostname. -@item \j -The number of jobs currently managed by the shell. -@item \l -The basename of the shell's terminal device name. -@item \n -A newline. -@item \r -A carriage return. -@item \s -The name of the shell, the basename of @code{$0} (the portion -following the final slash). -@item \t -The time, in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format. -@item \T -The time, in 12-hour HH:MM:SS format. -@item \@@ -The time, in 12-hour am/pm format. -@item \A -The time, in 24-hour HH:MM format. -@item \u -The username of the current user. -@item \v -The version of Bash (e.g., 2.00) -@item \V -The release of Bash, version + patchlevel (e.g., 2.00.0) -@item \w -The current working directory, with @env{$HOME} abbreviated with a tilde -(uses the @env{$PROMPT_DIRTRIM} variable). -@item \W -The basename of @env{$PWD}, with @env{$HOME} abbreviated with a tilde. -@item \! -The history number of this command. -@item \# -The command number of this command. -@item \$ -If the effective uid is 0, @code{#}, otherwise @code{$}. -@item \@var{nnn} -The character whose ASCII code is the octal value @var{nnn}. -@item \\ -A backslash. -@item \[ -Begin a sequence of non-printing characters. This could be used to -embed a terminal control sequence into the prompt. -@item \] -End a sequence of non-printing characters. -@end table - -The command number and the history number are usually different: -the history number of a command is its position in the history -list, which may include commands restored from the history file -(@pxref{Bash History Facilities}), while the command number is -the position in the sequence of commands executed during the current -shell session. - -After the string is decoded, it is expanded via -parameter expansion, command substitution, arithmetic -expansion, and quote removal, subject to the value of the -@code{promptvars} shell option (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@node The Restricted Shell -@section The Restricted Shell -@cindex restricted shell - -If Bash is started with the name @code{rbash}, or the -@option{--restricted} -or -@option{-r} -option is supplied at invocation, the shell becomes restricted. -A restricted shell is used to -set up an environment more controlled than the standard shell. -A restricted shell behaves identically to @code{bash} -with the exception that the following are disallowed or not performed: - -@itemize @bullet -@item -Changing directories with the @code{cd} builtin. -@item -Setting or unsetting the values of the @env{SHELL}, @env{PATH}, -@env{ENV}, or @env{BASH_ENV} variables. -@item -Specifying command names containing slashes. -@item -Specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the @code{.} -builtin command. -@item -Specifying a filename containing a slash as an argument to the @option{-p} -option to the @code{hash} builtin command. -@item -Importing function definitions from the shell environment at startup. -@item -Parsing the value of @env{SHELLOPTS} from the shell environment at startup. -@item -Redirecting output using the @samp{>}, @samp{>|}, @samp{<>}, @samp{>&}, -@samp{&>}, and @samp{>>} redirection operators. -@item -Using the @code{exec} builtin to replace the shell with another command. -@item -Adding or deleting builtin commands with the -@option{-f} and @option{-d} options to the @code{enable} builtin. -@item -Using the @code{enable} builtin command to enable disabled shell builtins. -@item -Specifying the @option{-p} option to the @code{command} builtin. -@item -Turning off restricted mode with @samp{set +r} or @samp{set +o restricted}. -@end itemize - -These restrictions are enforced after any startup files are read. - -When a command that is found to be a shell script is executed -(@pxref{Shell Scripts}), @code{rbash} turns off any restrictions in -the shell spawned to execute the script. - -@node Bash POSIX Mode -@section Bash POSIX Mode -@cindex POSIX Mode - -Starting Bash with the @option{--posix} command-line option or executing -@samp{set -o posix} while Bash is running will cause Bash to conform more -closely to the @sc{posix} standard by changing the behavior to -match that specified by @sc{posix} in areas where the Bash default differs. - -When invoked as @code{sh}, Bash enters @sc{posix} mode after reading the -startup files. - -The following list is what's changed when `@sc{posix} mode' is in effect: - -@enumerate -@item -When a command in the hash table no longer exists, Bash will re-search -@env{$PATH} to find the new location. This is also available with -@samp{shopt -s checkhash}. - -@item -The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job -exits with a non-zero status is `Done(status)'. - -@item -The message printed by the job control code and builtins when a job -is stopped is `Stopped(@var{signame})', where @var{signame} is, for -example, @code{SIGTSTP}. - -@item -The @code{bg} builtin uses the required format to describe each job placed -in the background, which does not include an indication of whether the job -is the current or previous job. - -@item -Reserved words appearing in a context where reserved words are recognized -do not undergo alias expansion. - -@item -The @sc{posix} @env{PS1} and @env{PS2} expansions of @samp{!} to -the history number and @samp{!!} to @samp{!} are enabled, -and parameter expansion is performed on the values of @env{PS1} and -@env{PS2} regardless of the setting of the @code{promptvars} option. - -@item -The @sc{posix} startup files are executed (@env{$ENV}) rather than -the normal Bash files. - -@item -Tilde expansion is only performed on assignments preceding a command -name, rather than on all assignment statements on the line. - -@item -The @code{command} builtin does not prevent builtins that take assignment -statements as arguments from expanding them as assignment statements; -when not in @sc{posix} mode, assignment builtins lose their assignment -statement expansion properties when preceded by @code{command}. - -@item -The default history file is @file{~/.sh_history} (this is the -default value of @env{$HISTFILE}). - -@item -The output of @samp{kill -l} prints all the signal names on a single line, -separated by spaces, without the @samp{SIG} prefix. - -@item -The @code{kill} builtin does not accept signal names with a @samp{SIG} -prefix. - -@item -Non-interactive shells exit if @var{filename} in @code{.} @var{filename} -is not found. - -@item -Non-interactive shells exit if a syntax error in an arithmetic expansion -results in an invalid expression. - -@item -Non-interactive shells exit if there is a syntax error in a script read -with the @code{.} or @code{source} builtins, or in a string processed by -the @code{eval} builtin. - -@item -Redirection operators do not perform filename expansion on the word -in the redirection unless the shell is interactive. - -@item -Redirection operators do not perform word splitting on the word in the -redirection. - -@item -Function names must be valid shell @code{name}s. 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 invalid name -causes a fatal syntax error in non-interactive shells. - -@item -Function names may not be the same as one of the @sc{posix} special -builtins. - -@item -@sc{posix} special builtins are found before shell functions -during command lookup. - -@item -The @code{time} reserved word may be used by itself as a command. When -used in this way, it displays timing statistics for the shell and its -completed children. The @env{TIMEFORMAT} variable controls the format -of the timing information. - -@item -When parsing and expanding a $@{@dots{}@} expansion that appears within -double quotes, single quotes are no longer special and cannot be used to -quote a closing brace or other special character, unless the operator is -one of those defined to perform pattern removal. In this case, they do -not have to appear as matched pairs. - -@item -The parser does not recognize @code{time} as a reserved word if the next -token begins with a @samp{-}. - -@item -If a @sc{posix} special builtin returns an error status, a -non-interactive shell exits. The fatal errors are those listed in -the @sc{posix} standard, and include things like passing incorrect options, -redirection errors, variable assignment errors for assignments preceding -the command name, and so on. - -@item -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 readonly variable. - -@item -A non-interactive shell exists with an error status if a variable -assignment error occurs in an assignment statement preceding a special -builtin, but not with any other simple command. - -@item -A non-interactive shell exits with an error status if the iteration -variable in a @code{for} statement or the selection variable in a -@code{select} statement is a readonly variable. - -@item -Process substitution is not available. - -@item -While variable indirection is available, it may not be applied to the -@samp{#} and @samp{?} special parameters. - -@item -Assignment statements preceding @sc{posix} special builtins -persist in the shell environment after the builtin completes. - -@item -Assignment statements preceding shell function calls persist in the -shell environment after the function returns, as if a @sc{posix} -special builtin command had been executed. - -@item -The @code{export} and @code{readonly} builtin commands display their -output in the format required by @sc{posix}. - -@item -The @code{trap} builtin displays signal names without the leading -@code{SIG}. - -@item -The @code{trap} builtin doesn't check the first argument for a possible -signal specification and revert the signal handling to the original -disposition if it is, unless that argument consists solely of digits and -is a valid signal number. If users want to reset the handler for a given -signal to the original disposition, they should use @samp{-} as the -first argument. - -@item -The @code{.} and @code{source} builtins do not search the current directory -for the filename argument if it is not found by searching @env{PATH}. - -@item -Subshells spawned to execute command substitutions inherit the value of -the @option{-e} option from the parent shell. When not in @sc{posix} mode, -Bash clears the @option{-e} option in such subshells. - -@item -Alias expansion is always enabled, even in non-interactive shells. - -@item -When the @code{alias} builtin displays alias definitions, it does not -display them with a leading @samp{alias } unless the @option{-p} option -is supplied. - -@item -When the @code{set} builtin is invoked without options, it does not display -shell function names and definitions. - -@item -When the @code{set} builtin is invoked without options, it displays -variable values without quotes, unless they contain shell metacharacters, -even if the result contains nonprinting characters. - -@item -When the @code{cd} builtin is invoked in @var{logical} mode, and the pathname -constructed from @code{$PWD} and the directory name supplied as an argument -does not refer to an existing directory, @code{cd} will fail instead of -falling back to @var{physical} mode. - -@item -The @code{pwd} builtin verifies that the value it prints is the same as the -current directory, even if it is not asked to check the file system with the -@option{-P} option. - -@item -When listing the history, the @code{fc} builtin does not include an -indication of whether or not a history entry has been modified. - -@item -The default editor used by @code{fc} is @code{ed}. - -@item -The @code{type} and @code{command} builtins will not report a non-executable -file as having been found, though the shell will attempt to execute such a -file if it is the only so-named file found in @code{$PATH}. - -@item -The @code{vi} editing mode will invoke the @code{vi} editor directly when -the @samp{v} command is run, instead of checking @code{$VISUAL} and -@code{$EDITOR}. - -@item -When the @code{xpg_echo} option is enabled, Bash does not attempt to interpret -any arguments to @code{echo} as options. Each argument is displayed, after -escape characters are converted. - -@item -The @code{ulimit} builtin uses a block size of 512 bytes for the @option{-c} -and @option{-f} options. - -@item -The arrival of @code{SIGCHLD} when a trap is set on @code{SIGCHLD} does -not interrupt the @code{wait} builtin and cause it to return immediately. -The trap command is run once for each child that exits. - -@item -The @code{read} builtin may be interrupted by a signal for which a trap -has been set. -If Bash receives a trapped signal while executing @code{read}, the trap -handler executes and @code{read} returns an exit status greater than 128. - -@end enumerate - -There is other @sc{posix} behavior that Bash does not implement by -default even when in @sc{posix} mode. -Specifically: - -@enumerate - -@item -The @code{fc} builtin checks @code{$EDITOR} as a program to edit history -entries if @code{FCEDIT} is unset, rather than defaulting directly to -@code{ed}. @code{fc} uses @code{ed} if @code{EDITOR} is unset. - -@item -As noted above, Bash requires the @code{xpg_echo} option to be enabled for -the @code{echo} builtin to be fully conformant. - -@end enumerate - -Bash can be configured to be @sc{posix}-conformant by default, by specifying -the @option{--enable-strict-posix-default} to @code{configure} when building -(@pxref{Optional Features}). - -@node Job Control -@chapter Job Control - -This chapter discusses what job control is, how it works, and how -Bash allows you to access its facilities. - -@menu -* Job Control Basics:: How job control works. -* Job Control Builtins:: Bash builtin commands used to interact - with job control. -* Job Control Variables:: Variables Bash uses to customize job - control. -@end menu - -@node Job Control Basics -@section Job Control Basics -@cindex job control -@cindex foreground -@cindex background -@cindex suspending jobs - -Job control -refers to the ability to selectively stop (suspend) -the execution of processes and continue (resume) -their execution at a later point. A user typically employs -this facility via an interactive interface supplied jointly -by the operating system kernel's terminal driver and Bash. - -The shell associates a @var{job} with each pipeline. It keeps a -table of currently executing jobs, which may be listed with the -@code{jobs} command. When Bash starts a job -asynchronously, it prints a line that looks -like: -@example -[1] 25647 -@end example -@noindent -indicating that this job is job number 1 and that the process @sc{id} -of the last process in the pipeline associated with this job is -25647. All of the processes in a single pipeline are members of -the same job. Bash uses the @var{job} abstraction as the -basis for job control. - -To facilitate the implementation of the user interface to job -control, the operating system maintains the notion of a current terminal -process group @sc{id}. Members of this process group (processes whose -process group @sc{id} is equal to the current terminal process group -@sc{id}) receive keyboard-generated signals such as @code{SIGINT}. -These processes are said to be in the foreground. Background -processes are those whose process group @sc{id} differs from the -terminal's; such processes are immune to keyboard-generated -signals. Only foreground processes are allowed to read from or, if -the user so specifies with @code{stty tostop}, write to the terminal. -Background processes which attempt to -read from (write to when @code{stty tostop} is in effect) the -terminal are sent a @code{SIGTTIN} (@code{SIGTTOU}) -signal by the kernel's terminal driver, -which, unless caught, suspends the process. - -If the operating system on which Bash is running supports -job control, Bash contains facilities to use it. Typing the -@var{suspend} character (typically @samp{^Z}, Control-Z) while a -process is running causes that process to be stopped and returns -control to Bash. Typing the @var{delayed suspend} character -(typically @samp{^Y}, Control-Y) causes the process to be stopped -when it attempts to read input from the terminal, and control to -be returned to Bash. The user then manipulates the state of -this job, using the @code{bg} command to continue it in the -background, the @code{fg} command to continue it in the -foreground, or the @code{kill} command to kill it. A @samp{^Z} -takes effect immediately, and has the additional side effect of -causing pending output and typeahead to be discarded. - -There are a number of ways to refer to a job in the shell. The -character @samp{%} introduces a job specification (@var{jobspec}). - -Job number @code{n} may be referred to as @samp{%n}. -The symbols @samp{%%} and @samp{%+} refer to the shell's notion of the -current job, which is the last job stopped while it was in the foreground -or started in the background. -A single @samp{%} (with no accompanying job specification) also refers -to the current job. -The previous job may be referenced using @samp{%-}. -If there is only a single job, @samp{%+} and @samp{%-} can both be used -to refer to that job. -In output pertaining to jobs (e.g., the output of the @code{jobs} -command), the current job is always flagged with a @samp{+}, and the -previous job with a @samp{-}. - -A job may also be referred to -using a prefix of the name used to start it, or using a substring -that appears in its command line. For example, @samp{%ce} refers -to a stopped @code{ce} job. Using @samp{%?ce}, on the -other hand, refers to any job containing the string @samp{ce} in -its command line. If the prefix or substring matches more than one job, -Bash reports an error. - -Simply naming a job can be used to bring it into the foreground: -@samp{%1} is a synonym for @samp{fg %1}, bringing job 1 from the -background into the foreground. Similarly, @samp{%1 &} resumes -job 1 in the background, equivalent to @samp{bg %1} - -The shell learns immediately whenever a job changes state. -Normally, Bash waits until it is about to print a prompt -before reporting changes in a job's status so as to not interrupt -any other output. -If the @option{-b} option to the @code{set} builtin is enabled, -Bash reports such changes immediately (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -Any trap on @code{SIGCHLD} is executed for each child process -that exits. - -If an attempt to exit Bash is made while jobs are stopped, (or running, if -the @code{checkjobs} option is enabled -- see @ref{The Shopt Builtin}), the -shell prints a warning message, and if the @code{checkjobs} option is -enabled, lists the jobs and their statuses. -The @code{jobs} command may then be used to inspect their status. -If a second attempt to exit is made without an intervening command, -Bash does not print another warning, and any stopped jobs are terminated. - -@node Job Control Builtins -@section Job Control Builtins - -@table @code - -@item bg -@btindex bg -@example -bg [@var{jobspec} @dots{}] -@end example - -Resume each suspended job @var{jobspec} in the background, as if it -had been started with @samp{&}. -If @var{jobspec} is not supplied, the current job is used. -The return status is zero unless it is run when job control is not -enabled, or, when run with job control enabled, any -@var{jobspec} was not found or specifies a job -that was started without job control. - -@item fg -@btindex fg -@example -fg [@var{jobspec}] -@end example - -Resume the job @var{jobspec} in the foreground and make it the current job. -If @var{jobspec} is not supplied, the current job is used. -The return status is that of the command placed into the foreground, -or non-zero if run when job control is disabled or, when run with -job control enabled, @var{jobspec} does not specify a valid job or -@var{jobspec} specifies a job that was started without job control. - -@item jobs -@btindex jobs -@example -jobs [-lnprs] [@var{jobspec}] -jobs -x @var{command} [@var{arguments}] -@end example - -The first form lists the active jobs. The options have the -following meanings: - -@table @code -@item -l -List process @sc{id}s in addition to the normal information. - -@item -n -Display information only about jobs that have changed status since -the user was last notified of their status. - -@item -p -List only the process @sc{id} of the job's process group leader. - -@item -r -Display only running jobs. - -@item -s -Display only stopped jobs. -@end table - -If @var{jobspec} is given, -output is restricted to information about that job. -If @var{jobspec} is not supplied, the status of all jobs is -listed. - -If the @option{-x} option is supplied, @code{jobs} replaces any -@var{jobspec} found in @var{command} or @var{arguments} with the -corresponding process group @sc{id}, and executes @var{command}, -passing it @var{argument}s, returning its exit status. - -@item kill -@btindex kill -@example -kill [-s @var{sigspec}] [-n @var{signum}] [-@var{sigspec}] @var{jobspec} or @var{pid} -kill -l [@var{exit_status}] -@end example - -Send a signal specified by @var{sigspec} or @var{signum} to the process -named by job specification @var{jobspec} or process @sc{id} @var{pid}. -@var{sigspec} is either a case-insensitive signal name such as -@code{SIGINT} (with or without the @code{SIG} prefix) -or a signal number; @var{signum} is a signal number. -If @var{sigspec} and @var{signum} are not present, @code{SIGTERM} is used. -The @option{-l} option lists the signal names. -If any arguments are supplied when @option{-l} is given, the names of the -signals corresponding to the arguments are listed, and the return status -is zero. -@var{exit_status} is a number specifying a signal number or the exit -status of a process terminated by a signal. -The return status is zero if at least one signal was successfully sent, -or non-zero if an error occurs or an invalid option is encountered. - -@item wait -@btindex wait -@example -wait [-n] [@var{jobspec} or @var{pid} @dots{}] -@end example - -Wait until the child process specified by each process @sc{id} @var{pid} -or job specification @var{jobspec} exits and return the exit status of the -last command waited for. -If a job spec is given, all processes in the job are waited for. -If no arguments are given, all currently active child processes are -waited for, and the return status is zero. -If the @option{-n} option is supplied, @code{wait} waits for any job to -terminate and returns its exit status. -If neither @var{jobspec} nor @var{pid} specifies an active child process -of the shell, the return status is 127. - -@item disown -@btindex disown -@example -disown [-ar] [-h] [@var{jobspec} @dots{}] -@end example - -Without options, remove each @var{jobspec} from the table of -active jobs. -If the @option{-h} option is given, the job is not removed from the table, -but is marked so that @code{SIGHUP} is not sent to the job if the shell -receives a @code{SIGHUP}. -If @var{jobspec} is not present, and neither the @option{-a} nor the -@option{-r} option is supplied, the current job is used. -If no @var{jobspec} is supplied, the @option{-a} option means to remove or -mark all jobs; the @option{-r} option without a @var{jobspec} -argument restricts operation to running jobs. - -@item suspend -@btindex suspend -@example -suspend [-f] -@end example - -Suspend the execution of this shell until it receives a -@code{SIGCONT} signal. -A login shell cannot be suspended; the @option{-f} -option can be used to override this and force the suspension. -@end table - -When job control is not active, the @code{kill} and @code{wait} -builtins do not accept @var{jobspec} arguments. They must be -supplied process @sc{id}s. - -@node Job Control Variables -@section Job Control Variables - -@vtable @code - -@item auto_resume -This variable controls how the shell interacts with the user and -job control. If this variable exists then single word simple -commands without redirections are treated as candidates for resumption -of an existing job. There is no ambiguity allowed; if there is -more than one job beginning with the string typed, then -the most recently accessed job will be selected. -The name of a stopped job, in this context, is the command line -used to start it. If this variable is set to the value @samp{exact}, -the string supplied must match the name of a stopped job exactly; -if set to @samp{substring}, -the string supplied needs to match a substring of the name of a -stopped job. The @samp{substring} value provides functionality -analogous to the @samp{%?} job @sc{id} (@pxref{Job Control Basics}). -If set to any other value, the supplied string must -be a prefix of a stopped job's name; this provides functionality -analogous to the @samp{%} job @sc{id}. - -@end vtable - -@set readline-appendix -@set history-appendix -@cindex Readline, how to use -@include rluser.texi -@cindex History, how to use -@include hsuser.texi -@clear readline-appendix -@clear history-appendix - -@node Installing Bash -@chapter Installing Bash - -This chapter provides basic instructions for installing Bash on -the various supported platforms. The distribution supports the -@sc{gnu} operating systems, nearly every version of Unix, and several -non-Unix systems such as BeOS and Interix. -Other independent ports exist for -@sc{ms-dos}, @sc{os/2}, and Windows platforms. - -@menu -* Basic Installation:: Installation instructions. -* Compilers and Options:: How to set special options for various - systems. -* Compiling For Multiple Architectures:: How to compile Bash for more - than one kind of system from - the same source tree. -* Installation Names:: How to set the various paths used by the installation. -* Specifying the System Type:: How to configure Bash for a particular system. -* Sharing Defaults:: How to share default configuration values among GNU - programs. -* Operation Controls:: Options recognized by the configuration program. -* Optional Features:: How to enable and disable optional features when - building Bash. -@end menu - -@node Basic Installation -@section Basic Installation -@cindex installation -@cindex configuration -@cindex Bash installation -@cindex Bash configuration - -These are installation instructions for Bash. - -The simplest way to compile Bash is: - -@enumerate -@item -@code{cd} to the directory containing the source code and type -@samp{./configure} to configure Bash for your system. If you're -using @code{csh} on an old version of System V, you might need to -type @samp{sh ./configure} instead to prevent @code{csh} from trying -to execute @code{configure} itself. - -Running @code{configure} takes some time. -While running, it prints messages telling which features it is -checking for. - -@item -Type @samp{make} to compile Bash and build the @code{bashbug} bug -reporting script. - -@item -Optionally, type @samp{make tests} to run the Bash test suite. - -@item -Type @samp{make install} to install @code{bash} and @code{bashbug}. -This will also install the manual pages and Info file. - -@end enumerate - -The @code{configure} shell script attempts to guess correct -values for various system-dependent variables used during -compilation. It uses those values to create a @file{Makefile} in -each directory of the package (the top directory, the -@file{builtins}, @file{doc}, and @file{support} directories, -each directory under @file{lib}, and several others). It also creates a -@file{config.h} file containing system-dependent definitions. -Finally, it creates a shell script named @code{config.status} that you -can run in the future to recreate the current configuration, a -file @file{config.cache} that saves the results of its tests to -speed up reconfiguring, and a file @file{config.log} containing -compiler output (useful mainly for debugging @code{configure}). -If at some point -@file{config.cache} contains results you don't want to keep, you -may remove or edit it. - -To find out more about the options and arguments that the -@code{configure} script understands, type - -@example -bash-2.04$ ./configure --help -@end example - -@noindent -at the Bash prompt in your Bash source directory. - -If you need to do unusual things to compile Bash, please -try to figure out how @code{configure} could check whether or not -to do them, and mail diffs or instructions to -@email{bash-maintainers@@gnu.org} so they can be -considered for the next release. - -The file @file{configure.ac} is used to create @code{configure} -by a program called Autoconf. You only need -@file{configure.ac} if you want to change it or regenerate -@code{configure} using a newer version of Autoconf. If -you do this, make sure you are using Autoconf version 2.50 or -newer. - -You can remove the program binaries and object files from the -source code directory by typing @samp{make clean}. To also remove the -files that @code{configure} created (so you can compile Bash for -a different kind of computer), type @samp{make distclean}. - -@node Compilers and Options -@section Compilers and Options - -Some systems require unusual options for compilation or linking -that the @code{configure} script does not know about. You can -give @code{configure} initial values for variables by setting -them in the environment. Using a Bourne-compatible shell, you -can do that on the command line like this: - -@example -CC=c89 CFLAGS=-O2 LIBS=-lposix ./configure -@end example - -On systems that have the @code{env} program, you can do it like this: - -@example -env CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/local/include LDFLAGS=-s ./configure -@end example - -The configuration process uses GCC to build Bash if it -is available. - -@node Compiling For Multiple Architectures -@section Compiling For Multiple Architectures - -You can compile Bash for more than one kind of computer at the -same time, by placing the object files for each architecture in their -own directory. To do this, you must use a version of @code{make} that -supports the @code{VPATH} variable, such as GNU @code{make}. -@code{cd} to the -directory where you want the object files and executables to go and run -the @code{configure} script from the source directory. You may need to -supply the @option{--srcdir=PATH} argument to tell @code{configure} where the -source files are. @code{configure} automatically checks for the -source code in the directory that @code{configure} is in and in `..'. - -If you have to use a @code{make} that does not supports the @code{VPATH} -variable, you can compile Bash for one architecture at a -time in the source code directory. After you have installed -Bash for one architecture, use @samp{make distclean} before -reconfiguring for another architecture. - -Alternatively, if your system supports symbolic links, you can use the -@file{support/mkclone} script to create a build tree which has -symbolic links back to each file in the source directory. Here's an -example that creates a build directory in the current directory from a -source directory @file{/usr/gnu/src/bash-2.0}: - -@example -bash /usr/gnu/src/bash-2.0/support/mkclone -s /usr/gnu/src/bash-2.0 . -@end example - -@noindent -The @code{mkclone} script requires Bash, so you must have already built -Bash for at least one architecture before you can create build -directories for other architectures. - -@node Installation Names -@section Installation Names - -By default, @samp{make install} will install into -@file{/usr/local/bin}, @file{/usr/local/man}, etc. You can -specify an installation prefix other than @file{/usr/local} by -giving @code{configure} the option @option{--prefix=@var{PATH}}, -or by specifying a value for the @code{DESTDIR} @samp{make} -variable when running @samp{make install}. - -You can specify separate installation prefixes for -architecture-specific files and architecture-independent files. -If you give @code{configure} the option -@option{--exec-prefix=@var{PATH}}, @samp{make install} will use -@var{PATH} as the prefix for installing programs and libraries. -Documentation and other data files will still use the regular prefix. - -@node Specifying the System Type -@section Specifying the System Type - -There may be some features @code{configure} can not figure out -automatically, but need to determine by the type of host Bash -will run on. Usually @code{configure} can figure that -out, but if it prints a message saying it can not guess the host -type, give it the @option{--host=TYPE} option. @samp{TYPE} can -either be a short name for the system type, such as @samp{sun4}, -or a canonical name with three fields: @samp{CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM} -(e.g., @samp{i386-unknown-freebsd4.2}). - -See the file @file{support/config.sub} for the possible -values of each field. - -@node Sharing Defaults -@section Sharing Defaults - -If you want to set default values for @code{configure} scripts to -share, you can create a site shell script called -@code{config.site} that gives default values for variables like -@code{CC}, @code{cache_file}, and @code{prefix}. @code{configure} -looks for @file{PREFIX/share/config.site} if it exists, then -@file{PREFIX/etc/config.site} if it exists. Or, you can set the -@code{CONFIG_SITE} environment variable to the location of the site -script. A warning: the Bash @code{configure} looks for a site script, -but not all @code{configure} scripts do. - -@node Operation Controls -@section Operation Controls - -@code{configure} recognizes the following options to control how it -operates. - -@table @code - -@item --cache-file=@var{file} -Use and save the results of the tests in -@var{file} instead of @file{./config.cache}. Set @var{file} to -@file{/dev/null} to disable caching, for debugging -@code{configure}. - -@item --help -Print a summary of the options to @code{configure}, and exit. - -@item --quiet -@itemx --silent -@itemx -q -Do not print messages saying which checks are being made. - -@item --srcdir=@var{dir} -Look for the Bash source code in directory @var{dir}. Usually -@code{configure} can determine that directory automatically. - -@item --version -Print the version of Autoconf used to generate the @code{configure} -script, and exit. -@end table - -@code{configure} also accepts some other, not widely used, boilerplate -options. @samp{configure --help} prints the complete list. - -@node Optional Features -@section Optional Features - -The Bash @code{configure} has a number of @option{--enable-@var{feature}} -options, where @var{feature} indicates an optional part of Bash. -There are also several @option{--with-@var{package}} options, -where @var{package} is something like @samp{bash-malloc} or @samp{purify}. -To turn off the default use of a package, use -@option{--without-@var{package}}. To configure Bash without a feature -that is enabled by default, use @option{--disable-@var{feature}}. - -Here is a complete list of the @option{--enable-} and -@option{--with-} options that the Bash @code{configure} recognizes. - -@table @code -@item --with-afs -Define if you are using the Andrew File System from Transarc. - -@item --with-bash-malloc -Use the Bash version of -@code{malloc} in the directory @file{lib/malloc}. This is not the same -@code{malloc} that appears in @sc{gnu} libc, but an older version -originally derived from the 4.2 @sc{bsd} @code{malloc}. This @code{malloc} -is very fast, but wastes some space on each allocation. -This option is enabled by default. -The @file{NOTES} file contains a list of systems for -which this should be turned off, and @code{configure} disables this -option automatically for a number of systems. - -@item --with-curses -Use the curses library instead of the termcap library. This should -be supplied if your system has an inadequate or incomplete termcap -database. - -@item --with-gnu-malloc -A synonym for @code{--with-bash-malloc}. - -@item --with-installed-readline[=@var{PREFIX}] -Define this to make Bash link with a locally-installed version of Readline -rather than the version in @file{lib/readline}. This works only with -Readline 5.0 and later versions. If @var{PREFIX} is @code{yes} or not -supplied, @code{configure} uses the values of the make variables -@code{includedir} and @code{libdir}, which are subdirectories of @code{prefix} -by default, to find the installed version of Readline if it is not in -the standard system include and library directories. -If @var{PREFIX} is @code{no}, Bash links with the version in -@file{lib/readline}. -If @var{PREFIX} is set to any other value, @code{configure} treats it as -a directory pathname and looks for -the installed version of Readline in subdirectories of that directory -(include files in @var{PREFIX}/@code{include} and the library in -@var{PREFIX}/@code{lib}). - -@item --with-purify -Define this to use the Purify memory allocation checker from Rational -Software. - -@item --enable-minimal-config -This produces a shell with minimal features, close to the historical -Bourne shell. -@end table - -There are several @option{--enable-} options that alter how Bash is -compiled and linked, rather than changing run-time features. - -@table @code -@item --enable-largefile -Enable support for @uref{http://www.sas.com/standards/large_file/x_open.20Mar96.html, -large files} if the operating system requires special compiler options -to build programs which can access large files. This is enabled by -default, if the operating system provides large file support. - -@item --enable-profiling -This builds a Bash binary that produces profiling information to be -processed by @code{gprof} each time it is executed. - -@item --enable-static-link -This causes Bash to be linked statically, if @code{gcc} is being used. -This could be used to build a version to use as root's shell. -@end table - -The @samp{minimal-config} option can be used to disable all of -the following options, but it is processed first, so individual -options may be enabled using @samp{enable-@var{feature}}. - -All of the following options except for @samp{disabled-builtins}, -@samp{directpand-default}, and -@samp{xpg-echo-default} are -enabled by default, unless the operating system does not provide the -necessary support. - -@table @code -@item --enable-alias -Allow alias expansion and include the @code{alias} and @code{unalias} -builtins (@pxref{Aliases}). - -@item --enable-arith-for-command -Include support for the alternate form of the @code{for} command -that behaves like the C language @code{for} statement -(@pxref{Looping Constructs}). - -@item --enable-array-variables -Include support for one-dimensional array shell variables -(@pxref{Arrays}). - -@item --enable-bang-history -Include support for @code{csh}-like history substitution -(@pxref{History Interaction}). - -@item --enable-brace-expansion -Include @code{csh}-like brace expansion -( @code{b@{a,b@}c} @expansion{} @code{bac bbc} ). -See @ref{Brace Expansion}, for a complete description. - -@item --enable-casemod-attributes -Include support for case-modifying attributes in the @code{declare} builtin -and assignment statements. Variables with the @var{uppercase} attribute, -for example, will have their values converted to uppercase upon assignment. - -@item --enable-casemod-expansion -Include support for case-modifying word expansions. - -@item --enable-command-timing -Include support for recognizing @code{time} as a reserved word and for -displaying timing statistics for the pipeline following @code{time} -(@pxref{Pipelines}). -This allows pipelines as well as shell builtins and functions to be timed. - -@item --enable-cond-command -Include support for the @code{[[} conditional command. -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@item --enable-cond-regexp -Include support for matching @sc{posix} regular expressions using the -@samp{=~} binary operator in the @code{[[} conditional command. -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@item --enable-coprocesses -Include support for coprocesses and the @code{coproc} reserved word -(@pxref{Pipelines}). - -@item --enable-debugger -Include support for the bash debugger (distributed separately). - -@item --enable-direxpand-default -Cause the @code{direxpand} shell option (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}) -to be enabled by default when the shell starts. -It is normally disabled by default. - -@item --enable-directory-stack -Include support for a @code{csh}-like directory stack and the -@code{pushd}, @code{popd}, and @code{dirs} builtins -(@pxref{The Directory Stack}). - -@item --enable-disabled-builtins -Allow builtin commands to be invoked via @samp{builtin xxx} -even after @code{xxx} has been disabled using @samp{enable -n xxx}. -See @ref{Bash Builtins}, for details of the @code{builtin} and -@code{enable} builtin commands. - -@item --enable-dparen-arithmetic -Include support for the @code{((@dots{}))} command -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@item --enable-extended-glob -Include support for the extended pattern matching features described -above under @ref{Pattern Matching}. - -@item --enable-extended-glob-default -Set the default value of the @var{extglob} shell option described -above under @ref{The Shopt Builtin} to be enabled. - -@item --enable-glob-asciirange-default -Set the default value of the @var{globasciiranges} shell option described -above under @ref{The Shopt Builtin} to be enabled. -This controls the behavior of character ranges when used in pattern matching -bracket expressions. - -@item --enable-help-builtin -Include the @code{help} builtin, which displays help on shell builtins and -variables (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item --enable-history -Include command history and the @code{fc} and @code{history} -builtin commands (@pxref{Bash History Facilities}). - -@item --enable-job-control -This enables the job control features (@pxref{Job Control}), -if the operating system supports them. - -@item --enable-multibyte -This enables support for multibyte characters if the operating -system provides the necessary support. - -@item --enable-net-redirections -This enables the special handling of filenames of the form -@code{/dev/tcp/@var{host}/@var{port}} and -@code{/dev/udp/@var{host}/@var{port}} -when used in redirections (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item --enable-process-substitution -This enables process substitution (@pxref{Process Substitution}) if -the operating system provides the necessary support. - -@item --enable-progcomp -Enable the programmable completion facilities -(@pxref{Programmable Completion}). -If Readline is not enabled, this option has no effect. - -@item --enable-prompt-string-decoding -Turn on the interpretation of a number of backslash-escaped characters -in the @env{$PS1}, @env{$PS2}, @env{$PS3}, and @env{$PS4} prompt -strings. See @ref{Controlling the Prompt}, for a complete list of prompt -string escape sequences. - -@item --enable-readline -Include support for command-line editing and history with the Bash -version of the Readline library (@pxref{Command Line Editing}). - -@item --enable-restricted -Include support for a @dfn{restricted shell}. If this is enabled, Bash, -when called as @code{rbash}, enters a restricted mode. See -@ref{The Restricted Shell}, for a description of restricted mode. - -@item --enable-select -Include the @code{select} compound command, which allows the generation of -simple menus (@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@item --enable-separate-helpfiles -Use external files for the documentation displayed by the @code{help} builtin -instead of storing the text internally. - -@item --enable-single-help-strings -Store the text displayed by the @code{help} builtin as a single string for -each help topic. This aids in translating the text to different languages. -You may need to disable this if your compiler cannot handle very long string -literals. - -@item --enable-strict-posix-default -Make Bash @sc{posix}-conformant by default (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}). - -@item --enable-usg-echo-default -A synonym for @code{--enable-xpg-echo-default}. - -@item --enable-xpg-echo-default -Make the @code{echo} builtin expand backslash-escaped characters by default, -without requiring the @option{-e} option. -This sets the default value of the @code{xpg_echo} shell option to @code{on}, -which makes the Bash @code{echo} behave more like the version specified in -the Single Unix Specification, version 3. -@xref{Bash Builtins}, for a description of the escape sequences that -@code{echo} recognizes. -@end table - -The file @file{config-top.h} contains C Preprocessor -@samp{#define} statements for options which are not settable from -@code{configure}. -Some of these are not meant to be changed; beware of the consequences if -you do. -Read the comments associated with each definition for more -information about its effect. - -@node Reporting Bugs -@appendix Reporting Bugs - -Please report all bugs you find in Bash. -But first, you should -make sure that it really is a bug, and that it appears in the latest -version of Bash. -The latest version of Bash is always available for FTP from -@uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bash/}. - -Once you have determined that a bug actually exists, use the -@code{bashbug} command to submit a bug report. -If you have a fix, you are encouraged to mail that as well! -Suggestions and `philosophical' bug reports may be mailed -to @email{bug-bash@@gnu.org} or posted to the Usenet -newsgroup @code{gnu.bash.bug}. - -All bug reports should include: -@itemize @bullet -@item -The version number of Bash. -@item -The hardware and operating system. -@item -The compiler used to compile Bash. -@item -A description of the bug behaviour. -@item -A short script or `recipe' which exercises the bug and may be used -to reproduce it. -@end itemize - -@noindent -@code{bashbug} inserts the first three items automatically into -the template it provides for filing a bug report. - -Please send all reports concerning this manual to -@email{bug-bash@@gnu.org}. - -@node Major Differences From The Bourne Shell -@appendix Major Differences From The Bourne Shell - -Bash implements essentially the same grammar, parameter and -variable expansion, redirection, and quoting as the Bourne Shell. -Bash uses the @sc{posix} standard as the specification of -how these features are to be implemented. There are some -differences between the traditional Bourne shell and Bash; this -section quickly details the differences of significance. A -number of these differences are explained in greater depth in -previous sections. -This section uses the version of @code{sh} included in SVR4.2 (the -last version of the historical Bourne shell) as the baseline reference. - -@itemize @bullet - -@item -Bash is @sc{posix}-conformant, even where the @sc{posix} specification -differs from traditional @code{sh} behavior (@pxref{Bash POSIX Mode}). - -@item -Bash has multi-character invocation options (@pxref{Invoking Bash}). - -@item -Bash has command-line editing (@pxref{Command Line Editing}) and -the @code{bind} builtin. - -@item -Bash provides a programmable word completion mechanism -(@pxref{Programmable Completion}), and builtin commands -@code{complete}, @code{compgen}, and @code{compopt}, to -manipulate it. - -@item -Bash has command history (@pxref{Bash History Facilities}) and the -@code{history} and @code{fc} builtins to manipulate it. -The Bash history list maintains timestamp information and uses the -value of the @code{HISTTIMEFORMAT} variable to display it. - -@item -Bash implements @code{csh}-like history expansion -(@pxref{History Interaction}). - -@item -Bash has one-dimensional array variables (@pxref{Arrays}), and the -appropriate variable expansions and assignment syntax to use them. -Several of the Bash builtins take options to act on arrays. -Bash provides a number of built-in array variables. - -@item -The @code{$'@dots{}'} quoting syntax, which expands ANSI-C -backslash-escaped characters in the text between the single quotes, -is supported (@pxref{ANSI-C Quoting}). - -@item -Bash supports the @code{$"@dots{}"} quoting syntax to do -locale-specific translation of the characters between the double -quotes. The @option{-D}, @option{--dump-strings}, and @option{--dump-po-strings} -invocation options list the translatable strings found in a script -(@pxref{Locale Translation}). - -@item -Bash implements the @code{!} keyword to negate the return value of -a pipeline (@pxref{Pipelines}). -Very useful when an @code{if} statement needs to act only if a test fails. -The Bash @samp{-o pipefail} option to @code{set} will cause a pipeline to -return a failure status if any command fails. - -@item -Bash has the @code{time} reserved word and command timing (@pxref{Pipelines}). -The display of the timing statistics may be controlled with the -@env{TIMEFORMAT} variable. - -@item -Bash implements the @code{for (( @var{expr1} ; @var{expr2} ; @var{expr3} ))} -arithmetic for command, similar to the C language (@pxref{Looping Constructs}). - -@item -Bash includes the @code{select} compound command, which allows the -generation of simple menus (@pxref{Conditional Constructs}). - -@item -Bash includes the @code{[[} compound command, which makes conditional -testing part of the shell grammar (@pxref{Conditional Constructs}), including -optional regular expression matching. - -@item -Bash provides optional case-insensitive matching for the @code{case} and -@code{[[} constructs. - -@item -Bash includes brace expansion (@pxref{Brace Expansion}) and tilde -expansion (@pxref{Tilde Expansion}). - -@item -Bash implements command aliases and the @code{alias} and @code{unalias} -builtins (@pxref{Aliases}). - -@item -Bash provides shell arithmetic, the @code{((} compound command -(@pxref{Conditional Constructs}), -and arithmetic expansion (@pxref{Shell Arithmetic}). - -@item -Variables present in the shell's initial environment are automatically -exported to child processes. The Bourne shell does not normally do -this unless the variables are explicitly marked using the @code{export} -command. - -@item -Bash supports the @samp{+=} assignment operator, which appends to the value -of the variable named on the left hand side. - -@item -Bash includes the @sc{posix} pattern removal @samp{%}, @samp{#}, @samp{%%} -and @samp{##} expansions to remove leading or trailing substrings from -variable values (@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -The expansion @code{$@{#xx@}}, which returns the length of @code{$@{xx@}}, -is supported (@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -The expansion @code{$@{var:}@var{offset}@code{[:}@var{length}@code{]@}}, -which expands to the substring of @code{var}'s value of length -@var{length}, beginning at @var{offset}, is present -(@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -The expansion -@code{$@{var/[/]}@var{pattern}@code{[/}@var{replacement}@code{]@}}, -which matches @var{pattern} and replaces it with @var{replacement} in -the value of @code{var}, is available (@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -The expansion @code{$@{!@var{prefix}*@}} expansion, which expands to -the names of all shell variables whose names begin with @var{prefix}, -is available (@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -Bash has @var{indirect} variable expansion using @code{$@{!word@}} -(@pxref{Shell Parameter Expansion}). - -@item -Bash can expand positional parameters beyond @code{$9} using -@code{$@{@var{num}@}}. - -@item -The @sc{posix} @code{$()} form of command substitution -is implemented (@pxref{Command Substitution}), -and preferred to the Bourne shell's @code{``} (which -is also implemented for backwards compatibility). - -@item -Bash has process substitution (@pxref{Process Substitution}). - -@item -Bash automatically assigns variables that provide information about the -current user (@env{UID}, @env{EUID}, and @env{GROUPS}), the current host -(@env{HOSTTYPE}, @env{OSTYPE}, @env{MACHTYPE}, and @env{HOSTNAME}), -and the instance of Bash that is running (@env{BASH}, -@env{BASH_VERSION}, and @env{BASH_VERSINFO}). @xref{Bash Variables}, -for details. - -@item -The @env{IFS} variable is used to split only the results of expansion, -not all words (@pxref{Word Splitting}). -This closes a longstanding shell security hole. - -@item -The filename expansion bracket expression code uses @samp{!} and @samp{^} -to negate the set of characters between the brackets. -The Bourne shell uses only @samp{!}. - -@item -Bash implements the full set of @sc{posix} filename expansion operators, -including @var{character classes}, @var{equivalence classes}, and -@var{collating symbols} (@pxref{Filename Expansion}). - -@item -Bash implements extended pattern matching features when the @code{extglob} -shell option is enabled (@pxref{Pattern Matching}). - -@item -It is possible to have a variable and a function with the same name; -@code{sh} does not separate the two name spaces. - -@item -Bash functions are permitted to have local variables using the -@code{local} builtin, and thus useful recursive functions may be written -(@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -Variable assignments preceding commands affect only that command, even -builtins and functions (@pxref{Environment}). -In @code{sh}, all variable assignments -preceding commands are global unless the command is executed from the -file system. - -@item -Bash performs filename expansion on filenames specified as operands -to input and output redirection operators (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item -Bash contains the @samp{<>} redirection operator, allowing a file to be -opened for both reading and writing, and the @samp{&>} redirection -operator, for directing standard output and standard error to the same -file (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item -Bash includes the @samp{<<<} redirection operator, allowing a string to -be used as the standard input to a command. - -@item -Bash implements the @samp{[n]<&@var{word}} and @samp{[n]>&@var{word}} -redirection operators, which move one file descriptor to another. - -@item -Bash treats a number of filenames specially when they are -used in redirection operators (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item -Bash can open network connections to arbitrary machines and services -with the redirection operators (@pxref{Redirections}). - -@item -The @code{noclobber} option is available to avoid overwriting existing -files with output redirection (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). -The @samp{>|} redirection operator may be used to override @code{noclobber}. - -@item -The Bash @code{cd} and @code{pwd} builtins (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) -each take @option{-L} and @option{-P} options to switch between logical and -physical modes. - -@item -Bash allows a function to override a builtin with the same name, and provides -access to that builtin's functionality within the function via the -@code{builtin} and @code{command} builtins (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -The @code{command} builtin allows selective disabling of functions -when command lookup is performed (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -Individual builtins may be enabled or disabled using the @code{enable} -builtin (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -The Bash @code{exec} builtin takes additional options that allow users -to control the contents of the environment passed to the executed -command, and what the zeroth argument to the command is to be -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item -Shell functions may be exported to children via the environment -using @code{export -f} (@pxref{Shell Functions}). - -@item -The Bash @code{export}, @code{readonly}, and @code{declare} builtins can -take a @option{-f} option to act on shell functions, a @option{-p} option to -display variables with various attributes set in a format that can be -used as shell input, a @option{-n} option to remove various variable -attributes, and @samp{name=value} arguments to set variable attributes -and values simultaneously. - -@item -The Bash @code{hash} builtin allows a name to be associated with -an arbitrary filename, even when that filename cannot be found by -searching the @env{$PATH}, using @samp{hash -p} -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item -Bash includes a @code{help} builtin for quick reference to shell -facilities (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -The @code{printf} builtin is available to display formatted output -(@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -The Bash @code{read} builtin (@pxref{Bash Builtins}) -will read a line ending in @samp{\} with -the @option{-r} option, and will use the @env{REPLY} variable as a -default if no non-option arguments are supplied. -The Bash @code{read} builtin -also accepts a prompt string with the @option{-p} option and will use -Readline to obtain the line when given the @option{-e} option. -The @code{read} builtin also has additional options to control input: -the @option{-s} option will turn off echoing of input characters as -they are read, the @option{-t} option will allow @code{read} to time out -if input does not arrive within a specified number of seconds, the -@option{-n} option will allow reading only a specified number of -characters rather than a full line, and the @option{-d} option will read -until a particular character rather than newline. - -@item -The @code{return} builtin may be used to abort execution of scripts -executed with the @code{.} or @code{source} builtins -(@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item -Bash includes the @code{shopt} builtin, for finer control of shell -optional capabilities (@pxref{The Shopt Builtin}), and allows these options -to be set and unset at shell invocation (@pxref{Invoking Bash}). - -@item -Bash has much more optional behavior controllable with the @code{set} -builtin (@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -The @samp{-x} (@option{xtrace}) option displays commands other than -simple commands when performing an execution trace -(@pxref{The Set Builtin}). - -@item -The @code{test} builtin (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) -is slightly different, as it implements the @sc{posix} algorithm, -which specifies the behavior based on the number of arguments. - -@item -Bash includes the @code{caller} builtin, which displays the context of -any active subroutine call (a shell function or a script executed with -the @code{.} or @code{source} builtins). This supports the bash -debugger. - -@item -The @code{trap} builtin (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) allows a -@code{DEBUG} pseudo-signal specification, similar to @code{EXIT}. -Commands specified with a @code{DEBUG} trap are executed before every -simple command, @code{for} command, @code{case} command, -@code{select} command, every arithmetic @code{for} command, and before -the first command executes in a shell function. -The @code{DEBUG} trap is not inherited by shell functions unless the -function has been given the @code{trace} attribute or the -@code{functrace} option has been enabled using the @code{shopt} builtin. -The @code{extdebug} shell option has additional effects on the -@code{DEBUG} trap. - -The @code{trap} builtin (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) allows an -@code{ERR} pseudo-signal specification, similar to @code{EXIT} and @code{DEBUG}. -Commands specified with an @code{ERR} trap are executed after a simple -command fails, with a few exceptions. -The @code{ERR} trap is not inherited by shell functions unless the -@code{-o errtrace} option to the @code{set} builtin is enabled. - -The @code{trap} builtin (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}) allows a -@code{RETURN} pseudo-signal specification, similar to -@code{EXIT} and @code{DEBUG}. -Commands specified with an @code{RETURN} trap are executed before -execution resumes after a shell function or a shell script executed with -@code{.} or @code{source} returns. -The @code{RETURN} trap is not inherited by shell functions unless the -function has been given the @code{trace} attribute or the -@code{functrace} option has been enabled using the @code{shopt} builtin. - -@item -The Bash @code{type} builtin is more extensive and gives more information -about the names it finds (@pxref{Bash Builtins}). - -@item -The Bash @code{umask} builtin permits a @option{-p} option to cause -the output to be displayed in the form of a @code{umask} command -that may be reused as input (@pxref{Bourne Shell Builtins}). - -@item -Bash implements a @code{csh}-like directory stack, and provides the -@code{pushd}, @code{popd}, and @code{dirs} builtins to manipulate it -(@pxref{The Directory Stack}). -Bash also makes the directory stack visible as the value of the -@env{DIRSTACK} shell variable. - -@item -Bash interprets special backslash-escaped characters in the prompt -strings when interactive (@pxref{Controlling the Prompt}). - -@item -The Bash restricted mode is more useful (@pxref{The Restricted Shell}); -the SVR4.2 shell restricted mode is too limited. - -@item -The @code{disown} builtin can remove a job from the internal shell -job table (@pxref{Job Control Builtins}) or suppress the sending -of @code{SIGHUP} to a job when the shell exits as the result of a -@code{SIGHUP}. - -@item -Bash includes a number of features to support a separate debugger for -shell scripts. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell has two privilege-related builtins -(@code{mldmode} and @code{priv}) not present in Bash. - -@item -Bash does not have the @code{stop} or @code{newgrp} builtins. - -@item -Bash does not use the @env{SHACCT} variable or perform shell accounting. - -@item -The SVR4.2 @code{sh} uses a @env{TIMEOUT} variable like Bash uses -@env{TMOUT}. - -@end itemize - -@noindent -More features unique to Bash may be found in @ref{Bash Features}. - - -@appendixsec Implementation Differences From The SVR4.2 Shell - -Since Bash is a completely new implementation, it does not suffer from -many of the limitations of the SVR4.2 shell. For instance: - -@itemize @bullet - -@item -Bash does not fork a subshell when redirecting into or out of -a shell control structure such as an @code{if} or @code{while} -statement. - -@item -Bash does not allow unbalanced quotes. The SVR4.2 shell will silently -insert a needed closing quote at @code{EOF} under certain circumstances. -This can be the cause of some hard-to-find errors. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell uses a baroque memory management scheme based on -trapping @code{SIGSEGV}. If the shell is started from a process with -@code{SIGSEGV} blocked (e.g., by using the @code{system()} C library -function call), it misbehaves badly. - -@item -In a questionable attempt at security, the SVR4.2 shell, -when invoked without the @option{-p} option, will alter its real -and effective @sc{uid} and @sc{gid} if they are less than some -magic threshold value, commonly 100. -This can lead to unexpected results. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell does not allow users to trap @code{SIGSEGV}, -@code{SIGALRM}, or @code{SIGCHLD}. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell does not allow the @env{IFS}, @env{MAILCHECK}, -@env{PATH}, @env{PS1}, or @env{PS2} variables to be unset. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell treats @samp{^} as the undocumented equivalent of -@samp{|}. - -@item -Bash allows multiple option arguments when it is invoked (@code{-x -v}); -the SVR4.2 shell allows only one option argument (@code{-xv}). In -fact, some versions of the shell dump core if the second argument begins -with a @samp{-}. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell exits a script if any builtin fails; Bash exits -a script only if one of the @sc{posix} special builtins fails, and -only for certain failures, as enumerated in the @sc{posix} standard. - -@item -The SVR4.2 shell behaves differently when invoked as @code{jsh} -(it turns on job control). -@end itemize - -@node GNU Free Documentation License -@appendix GNU Free Documentation License - -@include fdl.texi - -@node Indexes -@appendix Indexes - -@menu -* Builtin Index:: Index of Bash builtin commands. -* Reserved Word Index:: Index of Bash reserved words. -* Variable Index:: Quick reference helps you find the - variable you want. -* Function Index:: Index of bindable Readline functions. -* Concept Index:: General index for concepts described in - this manual. -@end menu - -@node Builtin Index -@appendixsec Index of Shell Builtin Commands -@printindex bt - -@node Reserved Word Index -@appendixsec Index of Shell Reserved Words -@printindex rw - -@node Variable Index -@appendixsec Parameter and Variable Index -@printindex vr - -@node Function Index -@appendixsec Function Index -@printindex fn - -@node Concept Index -@appendixsec Concept Index -@printindex cp - -@bye diff --git a/doc/version.texi~ b/doc/version.texi~ deleted file mode 100644 index d358355a7..000000000 --- a/doc/version.texi~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,10 +0,0 @@ -@ignore -Copyright (C) 1988-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. -@end ignore - -@set LASTCHANGE Tue Aug 6 09:56:12 EDT 2013 - -@set EDITION 4.3 -@set VERSION 4.3 -@set UPDATED 6 August 2013 -@set UPDATED-MONTH August 2013 diff --git a/examples/loadables/Makefile.in.save b/examples/loadables/Makefile.in.save deleted file mode 100644 index f6208f5cc..000000000 --- a/examples/loadables/Makefile.in.save +++ /dev/null @@ -1,238 +0,0 @@ -# -# 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 diff --git a/lib/readline/doc/Makefile.old b/lib/readline/doc/Makefile.old deleted file mode 100644 index 58d4dd762..000000000 --- a/lib/readline/doc/Makefile.old +++ /dev/null @@ -1,76 +0,0 @@ -# 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 diff --git a/lib/readline/rldefs.h~ b/lib/readline/rldefs.h~ deleted file mode 100644 index f4148f9c0..000000000 --- a/lib/readline/rldefs.h~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,166 +0,0 @@ -/* rldefs.h -- an attempt to isolate some of the system-specific defines - for readline. This should be included after any files that define - system-specific constants like _POSIX_VERSION or USG. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2011 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 . -*/ - -#if !defined (_RLDEFS_H_) -#define _RLDEFS_H_ - -#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H) -# include "config.h" -#endif - -#include "rlstdc.h" - -#if defined (STRCOLL_BROKEN) -# undef HAVE_STRCOLL -#endif - -#if defined (_POSIX_VERSION) && !defined (TERMIOS_MISSING) -# define TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER -#else -# if defined (HAVE_TERMIO_H) -# define TERMIO_TTY_DRIVER -# else -# if !defined (__MINGW32__) -# define NEW_TTY_DRIVER -# else -# define NO_TTY_DRIVER -# endif -# endif -#endif - -/* Posix macro to check file in statbuf for directory-ness. - This requires that be included before this test. */ -#if defined (S_IFDIR) && !defined (S_ISDIR) -# define S_ISDIR(m) (((m)&S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) -#endif - -/* Decide which flavor of the header file describing the C library - string functions to include and include it. */ - -#if defined (HAVE_STRING_H) -# include -#else /* !HAVE_STRING_H */ -# include -#endif /* !HAVE_STRING_H */ - -#if !defined (strchr) && !defined (__STDC__) -extern char *strchr (), *strrchr (); -#endif /* !strchr && !__STDC__ */ - -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -# include -#else -# if defined (PREFER_VARARGS) -# include -# endif -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_STRCASECMP) -#define _rl_stricmp strcasecmp -#define _rl_strnicmp strncasecmp -#else -extern int _rl_stricmp PARAMS((char *, char *)); -extern int _rl_strnicmp PARAMS((char *, char *, int)); -#endif - -#if defined (HAVE_STRPBRK) && !defined (HAVE_MULTIBYTE) -# define _rl_strpbrk(a,b) strpbrk((a),(b)) -#else -extern char *_rl_strpbrk PARAMS((const char *, const char *)); -#endif - -#if !defined (emacs_mode) -# define no_mode -1 -# define vi_mode 0 -# define emacs_mode 1 -#endif - -#if !defined (RL_IM_INSERT) -# define RL_IM_INSERT 1 -# define RL_IM_OVERWRITE 0 -# -# define RL_IM_DEFAULT RL_IM_INSERT -#endif - -/* If you cast map[key].function to type (Keymap) on a Cray, - the compiler takes the value of map[key].function and - divides it by 4 to convert between pointer types (pointers - to functions and pointers to structs are different sizes). - This is not what is wanted. */ -#if defined (CRAY) -# define FUNCTION_TO_KEYMAP(map, key) (Keymap)((int)map[key].function) -# define KEYMAP_TO_FUNCTION(data) (rl_command_func_t *)((int)(data)) -#else -# define FUNCTION_TO_KEYMAP(map, key) (Keymap)(map[key].function) -# define KEYMAP_TO_FUNCTION(data) (rl_command_func_t *)(data) -#endif - -#ifndef savestring -#define savestring(x) strcpy ((char *)xmalloc (1 + strlen (x)), (x)) -#endif - -/* Possible values for _rl_bell_preference. */ -#define NO_BELL 0 -#define AUDIBLE_BELL 1 -#define VISIBLE_BELL 2 - -/* Definitions used when searching the line for characters. */ -/* NOTE: it is necessary that opposite directions are inverses */ -#define FTO 1 /* forward to */ -#define BTO -1 /* backward to */ -#define FFIND 2 /* forward find */ -#define BFIND -2 /* backward find */ - -/* Possible values for the found_quote flags word used by the completion - functions. It says what kind of (shell-like) quoting we found anywhere - in the line. */ -#define RL_QF_SINGLE_QUOTE 0x01 -#define RL_QF_DOUBLE_QUOTE 0x02 -#define RL_QF_BACKSLASH 0x04 -#define RL_QF_OTHER_QUOTE 0x08 - -/* Default readline line buffer length. */ -#define DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE 256 - -#if !defined (STREQ) -#define STREQ(a, b) (((a)[0] == (b)[0]) && (strcmp ((a), (b)) == 0)) -#define STREQN(a, b, n) (((n) == 0) ? (1) \ - : ((a)[0] == (b)[0]) && (strncmp ((a), (b), (n)) == 0)) -#endif - -#if !defined (RL_STRLEN) -# define RL_STRLEN(s) (((s) && (s)[0]) ? ((s)[1] ? ((s)[2] ? strlen(s) : 2) : 1) : 0) -#endif - -#if !defined (FREE) -# define FREE(x) if (x) free (x) -#endif - -#if !defined (SWAP) -# define SWAP(s, e) do { int t; t = s; s = e; e = t; } while (0) -#endif - -/* CONFIGURATION SECTION */ -#include "rlconf.h" - -#endif /* !_RLDEFS_H_ */ diff --git a/lib/readline/rltty.c~ b/lib/readline/rltty.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index bd2c0eaa8..000000000 --- a/lib/readline/rltty.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,975 +0,0 @@ -/* rltty.c -- functions to prepare and restore the terminal for readline's - use. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1992-2005 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 . -*/ - -#define READLINE_LIBRARY - -#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H) -# include -#endif - -#include -#include -#include -#include - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif /* HAVE_UNISTD_H */ - -#include "rldefs.h" - -#if defined (GWINSZ_IN_SYS_IOCTL) -# include -#endif /* GWINSZ_IN_SYS_IOCTL */ - -#include "rltty.h" -#include "readline.h" -#include "rlprivate.h" - -#if !defined (errno) -extern int errno; -#endif /* !errno */ - -rl_vintfunc_t *rl_prep_term_function = rl_prep_terminal; -rl_voidfunc_t *rl_deprep_term_function = rl_deprep_terminal; - -static void set_winsize PARAMS((int)); - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Saving and Restoring the TTY */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Non-zero means that the terminal is in a prepped state. */ -static int terminal_prepped; - -static _RL_TTY_CHARS _rl_tty_chars, _rl_last_tty_chars; - -/* If non-zero, means that this process has called tcflow(fd, TCOOFF) - and output is suspended. */ -#if defined (__ksr1__) -static int ksrflow; -#endif - -/* Dummy call to force a backgrounded readline to stop before it tries - to get the tty settings. */ -static void -set_winsize (tty) - int tty; -{ -#if defined (TIOCGWINSZ) - struct winsize w; - - if (ioctl (tty, TIOCGWINSZ, &w) == 0) - (void) ioctl (tty, TIOCSWINSZ, &w); -#endif /* TIOCGWINSZ */ -} - -#if defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) -/* Nothing */ -#elif defined (NEW_TTY_DRIVER) - -/* Values for the `flags' field of a struct bsdtty. This tells which - elements of the struct bsdtty have been fetched from the system and - are valid. */ -#define SGTTY_SET 0x01 -#define LFLAG_SET 0x02 -#define TCHARS_SET 0x04 -#define LTCHARS_SET 0x08 - -struct bsdtty { - struct sgttyb sgttyb; /* Basic BSD tty driver information. */ - int lflag; /* Local mode flags, like LPASS8. */ -#if defined (TIOCGETC) - struct tchars tchars; /* Terminal special characters, including ^S and ^Q. */ -#endif -#if defined (TIOCGLTC) - struct ltchars ltchars; /* 4.2 BSD editing characters */ -#endif - int flags; /* Bitmap saying which parts of the struct are valid. */ -}; - -#define TIOTYPE struct bsdtty - -static TIOTYPE otio; - -static void save_tty_chars PARAMS((TIOTYPE *)); -static int _get_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int get_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int _set_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int set_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); - -static void prepare_terminal_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE, TIOTYPE *)); - -static void set_special_char PARAMS((Keymap, TIOTYPE *, int, rl_command_func_t)); - -static void -save_tty_chars (tiop) - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - _rl_last_tty_chars = _rl_tty_chars; - - if (tiop->flags & SGTTY_SET) - { - _rl_tty_chars.t_erase = tiop->sgttyb.sg_erase; - _rl_tty_chars.t_kill = tiop->sgttyb.sg_kill; - } - - if (tiop->flags & TCHARS_SET) - { - _rl_intr_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_intr = tiop->tchars.t_intrc; - _rl_quit_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_quit = tiop->tchars.t_quitc; - - _rl_tty_chars.t_start = tiop->tchars.t_startc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_stop = tiop->tchars.t_stopc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_eof = tiop->tchars.t_eofc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_eol = '\n'; - _rl_tty_chars.t_eol2 = tiop->tchars.t_brkc; - } - - if (tiop->flags & LTCHARS_SET) - { - _rl_susp_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_susp = tiop->ltchars.t_suspc; - - _rl_tty_chars.t_dsusp = tiop->ltchars.t_dsuspc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_reprint = tiop->ltchars.t_rprntc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_flush = tiop->ltchars.t_flushc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_werase = tiop->ltchars.t_werasc; - _rl_tty_chars.t_lnext = tiop->ltchars.t_lnextc; - } - - _rl_tty_chars.t_status = -1; -} - -static int -get_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - set_winsize (tty); - - tiop->flags = tiop->lflag = 0; - - errno = 0; - if (ioctl (tty, TIOCGETP, &(tiop->sgttyb)) < 0) - return -1; - tiop->flags |= SGTTY_SET; - -#if defined (TIOCLGET) - if (ioctl (tty, TIOCLGET, &(tiop->lflag)) == 0) - tiop->flags |= LFLAG_SET; -#endif - -#if defined (TIOCGETC) - if (ioctl (tty, TIOCGETC, &(tiop->tchars)) == 0) - tiop->flags |= TCHARS_SET; -#endif - -#if defined (TIOCGLTC) - if (ioctl (tty, TIOCGLTC, &(tiop->ltchars)) == 0) - tiop->flags |= LTCHARS_SET; -#endif - - return 0; -} - -static int -set_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - if (tiop->flags & SGTTY_SET) - { - ioctl (tty, TIOCSETN, &(tiop->sgttyb)); - tiop->flags &= ~SGTTY_SET; - } - _rl_echoing_p = 1; - -#if defined (TIOCLSET) - if (tiop->flags & LFLAG_SET) - { - ioctl (tty, TIOCLSET, &(tiop->lflag)); - tiop->flags &= ~LFLAG_SET; - } -#endif - -#if defined (TIOCSETC) - if (tiop->flags & TCHARS_SET) - { - ioctl (tty, TIOCSETC, &(tiop->tchars)); - tiop->flags &= ~TCHARS_SET; - } -#endif - -#if defined (TIOCSLTC) - if (tiop->flags & LTCHARS_SET) - { - ioctl (tty, TIOCSLTC, &(tiop->ltchars)); - tiop->flags &= ~LTCHARS_SET; - } -#endif - - return 0; -} - -static void -prepare_terminal_settings (meta_flag, oldtio, tiop) - int meta_flag; - TIOTYPE oldtio, *tiop; -{ - _rl_echoing_p = (oldtio.sgttyb.sg_flags & ECHO); - _rl_echoctl = (oldtio.sgttyb.sg_flags & ECHOCTL); - - /* Copy the original settings to the structure we're going to use for - our settings. */ - tiop->sgttyb = oldtio.sgttyb; - tiop->lflag = oldtio.lflag; -#if defined (TIOCGETC) - tiop->tchars = oldtio.tchars; -#endif -#if defined (TIOCGLTC) - tiop->ltchars = oldtio.ltchars; -#endif - tiop->flags = oldtio.flags; - - /* First, the basic settings to put us into character-at-a-time, no-echo - input mode. */ - tiop->sgttyb.sg_flags &= ~(ECHO | CRMOD); - tiop->sgttyb.sg_flags |= CBREAK; - - /* If this terminal doesn't care how the 8th bit is used, then we can - use it for the meta-key. If only one of even or odd parity is - specified, then the terminal is using parity, and we cannot. */ -#if !defined (ANYP) -# define ANYP (EVENP | ODDP) -#endif - if (((oldtio.sgttyb.sg_flags & ANYP) == ANYP) || - ((oldtio.sgttyb.sg_flags & ANYP) == 0)) - { - tiop->sgttyb.sg_flags |= ANYP; - - /* Hack on local mode flags if we can. */ -#if defined (TIOCLGET) -# if defined (LPASS8) - tiop->lflag |= LPASS8; -# endif /* LPASS8 */ -#endif /* TIOCLGET */ - } - -#if defined (TIOCGETC) -# if defined (USE_XON_XOFF) - /* Get rid of terminal output start and stop characters. */ - tiop->tchars.t_stopc = -1; /* C-s */ - tiop->tchars.t_startc = -1; /* C-q */ - - /* If there is an XON character, bind it to restart the output. */ - if (oldtio.tchars.t_startc != -1) - rl_bind_key (oldtio.tchars.t_startc, rl_restart_output); -# endif /* USE_XON_XOFF */ - - /* If there is an EOF char, bind _rl_eof_char to it. */ - if (oldtio.tchars.t_eofc != -1) - _rl_eof_char = oldtio.tchars.t_eofc; - -# if defined (NO_KILL_INTR) - /* Get rid of terminal-generated SIGQUIT and SIGINT. */ - tiop->tchars.t_quitc = -1; /* C-\ */ - tiop->tchars.t_intrc = -1; /* C-c */ -# endif /* NO_KILL_INTR */ -#endif /* TIOCGETC */ - -#if defined (TIOCGLTC) - /* Make the interrupt keys go away. Just enough to make people happy. */ - tiop->ltchars.t_dsuspc = -1; /* C-y */ - tiop->ltchars.t_lnextc = -1; /* C-v */ -#endif /* TIOCGLTC */ -} - -#else /* !defined (NEW_TTY_DRIVER) */ - -#if !defined (VMIN) -# define VMIN VEOF -#endif - -#if !defined (VTIME) -# define VTIME VEOL -#endif - -#if defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) -# define TIOTYPE struct termios -# define DRAIN_OUTPUT(fd) tcdrain (fd) -# define GETATTR(tty, tiop) (tcgetattr (tty, tiop)) -# ifdef M_UNIX -# define SETATTR(tty, tiop) (tcsetattr (tty, TCSANOW, tiop)) -# else -# define SETATTR(tty, tiop) (tcsetattr (tty, TCSADRAIN, tiop)) -# endif /* !M_UNIX */ -#else -# define TIOTYPE struct termio -# define DRAIN_OUTPUT(fd) -# define GETATTR(tty, tiop) (ioctl (tty, TCGETA, tiop)) -# define SETATTR(tty, tiop) (ioctl (tty, TCSETAW, tiop)) -#endif /* !TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ - -static TIOTYPE otio; - -static void save_tty_chars PARAMS((TIOTYPE *)); -static int _get_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int get_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int _set_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); -static int set_tty_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE *)); - -static void prepare_terminal_settings PARAMS((int, TIOTYPE, TIOTYPE *)); - -static void set_special_char PARAMS((Keymap, TIOTYPE *, int, rl_command_func_t)); -static void _rl_bind_tty_special_chars PARAMS((Keymap, TIOTYPE)); - -#if defined (FLUSHO) -# define OUTPUT_BEING_FLUSHED(tp) (tp->c_lflag & FLUSHO) -#else -# define OUTPUT_BEING_FLUSHED(tp) 0 -#endif - -static void -save_tty_chars (tiop) - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - _rl_last_tty_chars = _rl_tty_chars; - - _rl_tty_chars.t_eof = tiop->c_cc[VEOF]; - _rl_tty_chars.t_eol = tiop->c_cc[VEOL]; -#ifdef VEOL2 - _rl_tty_chars.t_eol2 = tiop->c_cc[VEOL2]; -#endif - _rl_tty_chars.t_erase = tiop->c_cc[VERASE]; -#ifdef VWERASE - _rl_tty_chars.t_werase = tiop->c_cc[VWERASE]; -#endif - _rl_tty_chars.t_kill = tiop->c_cc[VKILL]; -#ifdef VREPRINT - _rl_tty_chars.t_reprint = tiop->c_cc[VREPRINT]; -#endif - _rl_intr_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_intr = tiop->c_cc[VINTR]; - _rl_quit_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_quit = tiop->c_cc[VQUIT]; -#ifdef VSUSP - _rl_susp_char = _rl_tty_chars.t_susp = tiop->c_cc[VSUSP]; -#endif -#ifdef VDSUSP - _rl_tty_chars.t_dsusp = tiop->c_cc[VDSUSP]; -#endif -#ifdef VSTART - _rl_tty_chars.t_start = tiop->c_cc[VSTART]; -#endif -#ifdef VSTOP - _rl_tty_chars.t_stop = tiop->c_cc[VSTOP]; -#endif -#ifdef VLNEXT - _rl_tty_chars.t_lnext = tiop->c_cc[VLNEXT]; -#endif -#ifdef VDISCARD - _rl_tty_chars.t_flush = tiop->c_cc[VDISCARD]; -#endif -#ifdef VSTATUS - _rl_tty_chars.t_status = tiop->c_cc[VSTATUS]; -#endif -} - -#if defined (_AIX) || defined (_AIX41) -/* Currently this is only used on AIX */ -static void -rltty_warning (msg) - char *msg; -{ - _rl_errmsg ("warning: %s", msg); -} -#endif - -#if defined (_AIX) -void -setopost(tp) -TIOTYPE *tp; -{ - if ((tp->c_oflag & OPOST) == 0) - { - _rl_errmsg ("warning: turning on OPOST for terminal\r"); - tp->c_oflag |= OPOST|ONLCR; - } -} -#endif - -static int -_get_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - int ioctl_ret; - - while (1) - { - ioctl_ret = GETATTR (tty, tiop); - if (ioctl_ret < 0) - { - if (errno != EINTR) - return -1; - else - continue; - } - if (OUTPUT_BEING_FLUSHED (tiop)) - { -#if defined (FLUSHO) - _rl_errmsg ("warning: turning off output flushing"); - tiop->c_lflag &= ~FLUSHO; - break; -#else - continue; -#endif - } - break; - } - - return 0; -} - -static int -get_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - set_winsize (tty); - - errno = 0; - if (_get_tty_settings (tty, tiop) < 0) - return -1; - -#if defined (_AIX) - setopost(tiop); -#endif - - return 0; -} - -static int -_set_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - while (SETATTR (tty, tiop) < 0) - { - if (errno != EINTR) - return -1; - errno = 0; - } - return 0; -} - -static int -set_tty_settings (tty, tiop) - int tty; - TIOTYPE *tiop; -{ - if (_set_tty_settings (tty, tiop) < 0) - return -1; - -#if 0 - -#if defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) -# if defined (__ksr1__) - if (ksrflow) - { - ksrflow = 0; - tcflow (tty, TCOON); - } -# else /* !ksr1 */ - tcflow (tty, TCOON); /* Simulate a ^Q. */ -# endif /* !ksr1 */ -#else - ioctl (tty, TCXONC, 1); /* Simulate a ^Q. */ -#endif /* !TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ - -#endif /* 0 */ - - return 0; -} - -static void -prepare_terminal_settings (meta_flag, oldtio, tiop) - int meta_flag; - TIOTYPE oldtio, *tiop; -{ - _rl_echoing_p = (oldtio.c_lflag & ECHO); -#if defined (ECHOCTL) - _rl_echoctl = (oldtio.c_lflag & ECHOCTL); -#endif - - tiop->c_lflag &= ~(ICANON | ECHO); - - if ((unsigned char) oldtio.c_cc[VEOF] != (unsigned char) _POSIX_VDISABLE) - _rl_eof_char = oldtio.c_cc[VEOF]; - -#if defined (USE_XON_XOFF) -#if defined (IXANY) - tiop->c_iflag &= ~(IXON | IXANY); -#else - /* `strict' Posix systems do not define IXANY. */ - tiop->c_iflag &= ~IXON; -#endif /* IXANY */ -#endif /* USE_XON_XOFF */ - - /* Only turn this off if we are using all 8 bits. */ - if (((tiop->c_cflag & CSIZE) == CS8) || meta_flag) - tiop->c_iflag &= ~(ISTRIP | INPCK); - - /* Make sure we differentiate between CR and NL on input. */ - tiop->c_iflag &= ~(ICRNL | INLCR); - -#if !defined (HANDLE_SIGNALS) - tiop->c_lflag &= ~ISIG; -#else - tiop->c_lflag |= ISIG; -#endif - - tiop->c_cc[VMIN] = 1; - tiop->c_cc[VTIME] = 0; - -#if defined (FLUSHO) - if (OUTPUT_BEING_FLUSHED (tiop)) - { - tiop->c_lflag &= ~FLUSHO; - oldtio.c_lflag &= ~FLUSHO; - } -#endif - - /* Turn off characters that we need on Posix systems with job control, - just to be sure. This includes ^Y and ^V. This should not really - be necessary. */ -#if defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) && defined (_POSIX_VDISABLE) - -#if defined (VLNEXT) - tiop->c_cc[VLNEXT] = _POSIX_VDISABLE; -#endif - -#if defined (VDSUSP) - tiop->c_cc[VDSUSP] = _POSIX_VDISABLE; -#endif - -#endif /* TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER && _POSIX_VDISABLE */ -} -#endif /* !NEW_TTY_DRIVER */ - -/* Put the terminal in CBREAK mode so that we can detect key presses. */ -#if defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) -void -rl_prep_terminal (meta_flag) - int meta_flag; -{ - _rl_echoing_p = 1; -} - -void -rl_deprep_terminal () -{ -} - -#else /* ! NO_TTY_DRIVER */ -void -rl_prep_terminal (meta_flag) - int meta_flag; -{ - int tty; - TIOTYPE tio; - - if (terminal_prepped) - return; - - /* Try to keep this function from being INTerrupted. */ - _rl_block_sigint (); - - tty = rl_instream ? fileno (rl_instream) : fileno (stdin); - - if (get_tty_settings (tty, &tio) < 0) - { -#if defined (ENOTSUP) - /* MacOS X and Linux, at least, lie about the value of errno if - tcgetattr fails. */ - if (errno == ENOTTY || errno == EINVAL || errno == ENOTSUP) -#else - if (errno == ENOTTY || errno == EINVAL) -#endif - _rl_echoing_p = 1; /* XXX */ - - _rl_release_sigint (); - return; - } - - otio = tio; - - if (_rl_bind_stty_chars) - { -#if defined (VI_MODE) - /* If editing in vi mode, make sure we restore the bindings in the - insertion keymap no matter what keymap we ended up in. */ - if (rl_editing_mode == vi_mode) - rl_tty_unset_default_bindings (vi_insertion_keymap); - else -#endif - rl_tty_unset_default_bindings (_rl_keymap); - } - save_tty_chars (&otio); - RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_TTYCSAVED); - if (_rl_bind_stty_chars) - { -#if defined (VI_MODE) - /* If editing in vi mode, make sure we set the bindings in the - insertion keymap no matter what keymap we ended up in. */ - if (rl_editing_mode == vi_mode) - _rl_bind_tty_special_chars (vi_insertion_keymap, tio); - else -#endif - _rl_bind_tty_special_chars (_rl_keymap, tio); - } - - prepare_terminal_settings (meta_flag, otio, &tio); - - if (set_tty_settings (tty, &tio) < 0) - { - _rl_release_sigint (); - return; - } - - if (_rl_enable_keypad) - _rl_control_keypad (1); - - fflush (rl_outstream); - terminal_prepped = 1; - RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_TERMPREPPED); - - _rl_release_sigint (); -} - -/* Restore the terminal's normal settings and modes. */ -void -rl_deprep_terminal () -{ - int tty; - - if (!terminal_prepped) - return; - - /* Try to keep this function from being interrupted. */ - _rl_block_sigint (); - - tty = rl_instream ? fileno (rl_instream) : fileno (stdin); - - if (_rl_enable_keypad) - _rl_control_keypad (0); - - fflush (rl_outstream); - - if (set_tty_settings (tty, &otio) < 0) - { - _rl_release_sigint (); - return; - } - - terminal_prepped = 0; - RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_TERMPREPPED); - - _rl_release_sigint (); -} -#endif /* !NO_TTY_DRIVER */ - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Bogus Flow Control */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -int -rl_restart_output (count, key) - int count, key; -{ -#if defined (__MINGW32__) - return 0; -#else /* !__MING32__ */ - - int fildes = fileno (rl_outstream); -#if defined (TIOCSTART) -#if defined (apollo) - ioctl (&fildes, TIOCSTART, 0); -#else - ioctl (fildes, TIOCSTART, 0); -#endif /* apollo */ - -#else /* !TIOCSTART */ -# if defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) -# if defined (__ksr1__) - if (ksrflow) - { - ksrflow = 0; - tcflow (fildes, TCOON); - } -# else /* !ksr1 */ - tcflow (fildes, TCOON); /* Simulate a ^Q. */ -# endif /* !ksr1 */ -# else /* !TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ -# if defined (TCXONC) - ioctl (fildes, TCXONC, TCOON); -# endif /* TCXONC */ -# endif /* !TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ -#endif /* !TIOCSTART */ - - return 0; -#endif /* !__MINGW32__ */ -} - -int -rl_stop_output (count, key) - int count, key; -{ -#if defined (__MINGW32__) - return 0; -#else - - int fildes = fileno (rl_instream); - -#if defined (TIOCSTOP) -# if defined (apollo) - ioctl (&fildes, TIOCSTOP, 0); -# else - ioctl (fildes, TIOCSTOP, 0); -# endif /* apollo */ -#else /* !TIOCSTOP */ -# if defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) -# if defined (__ksr1__) - ksrflow = 1; -# endif /* ksr1 */ - tcflow (fildes, TCOOFF); -# else -# if defined (TCXONC) - ioctl (fildes, TCXONC, TCOON); -# endif /* TCXONC */ -# endif /* !TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ -#endif /* !TIOCSTOP */ - - return 0; -#endif /* !__MINGW32__ */ -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Default Key Bindings */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#if !defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) -#define SET_SPECIAL(sc, func) set_special_char(kmap, &ttybuff, sc, func) -#endif - -#if defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) - -#define SET_SPECIAL(sc, func) -#define RESET_SPECIAL(c) - -#elif defined (NEW_TTY_DRIVER) -static void -set_special_char (kmap, tiop, sc, func) - Keymap kmap; - TIOTYPE *tiop; - int sc; - rl_command_func_t *func; -{ - if (sc != -1 && kmap[(unsigned char)sc].type == ISFUNC) - kmap[(unsigned char)sc].function = func; -} - -#define RESET_SPECIAL(c) \ - if (c != -1 && kmap[(unsigned char)c].type == ISFUNC) \ - kmap[(unsigned char)c].function = rl_insert; - -static void -_rl_bind_tty_special_chars (kmap, ttybuff) - Keymap kmap; - TIOTYPE ttybuff; -{ - if (ttybuff.flags & SGTTY_SET) - { - SET_SPECIAL (ttybuff.sgttyb.sg_erase, rl_rubout); - SET_SPECIAL (ttybuff.sgttyb.sg_kill, rl_unix_line_discard); - } - -# if defined (TIOCGLTC) - if (ttybuff.flags & LTCHARS_SET) - { - SET_SPECIAL (ttybuff.ltchars.t_werasc, rl_unix_word_rubout); - SET_SPECIAL (ttybuff.ltchars.t_lnextc, rl_quoted_insert); - } -# endif /* TIOCGLTC */ -} - -#else /* !NEW_TTY_DRIVER */ -static void -set_special_char (kmap, tiop, sc, func) - Keymap kmap; - TIOTYPE *tiop; - int sc; - rl_command_func_t *func; -{ - unsigned char uc; - - uc = tiop->c_cc[sc]; - if (uc != (unsigned char)_POSIX_VDISABLE && kmap[uc].type == ISFUNC) - kmap[uc].function = func; -} - -/* used later */ -#define RESET_SPECIAL(uc) \ - if (uc != (unsigned char)_POSIX_VDISABLE && kmap[uc].type == ISFUNC) \ - kmap[uc].function = rl_insert; - -static void -_rl_bind_tty_special_chars (kmap, ttybuff) - Keymap kmap; - TIOTYPE ttybuff; -{ - SET_SPECIAL (VERASE, rl_rubout); - SET_SPECIAL (VKILL, rl_unix_line_discard); - -# if defined (VLNEXT) && defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) - SET_SPECIAL (VLNEXT, rl_quoted_insert); -# endif /* VLNEXT && TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ - -# if defined (VWERASE) && defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) - SET_SPECIAL (VWERASE, rl_unix_word_rubout); -# endif /* VWERASE && TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ -} - -#endif /* !NEW_TTY_DRIVER */ - -/* Set the system's default editing characters to their readline equivalents - in KMAP. Should be static, now that we have rl_tty_set_default_bindings. */ -void -rltty_set_default_bindings (kmap) - Keymap kmap; -{ -#if !defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) - TIOTYPE ttybuff; - int tty; - - tty = fileno (rl_instream); - - if (get_tty_settings (tty, &ttybuff) == 0) - _rl_bind_tty_special_chars (kmap, ttybuff); -#endif -} - -/* New public way to set the system default editing chars to their readline - equivalents. */ -void -rl_tty_set_default_bindings (kmap) - Keymap kmap; -{ - rltty_set_default_bindings (kmap); -} - -/* Rebind all of the tty special chars that readline worries about back - to self-insert. Call this before saving the current terminal special - chars with save_tty_chars(). This only works on POSIX termios or termio - systems. */ -void -rl_tty_unset_default_bindings (kmap) - Keymap kmap; -{ - /* Don't bother before we've saved the tty special chars at least once. */ - if (RL_ISSTATE(RL_STATE_TTYCSAVED) == 0) - return; - - RESET_SPECIAL (_rl_tty_chars.t_erase); - RESET_SPECIAL (_rl_tty_chars.t_kill); - -# if defined (VLNEXT) && defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) - RESET_SPECIAL (_rl_tty_chars.t_lnext); -# endif /* VLNEXT && TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ - -# if defined (VWERASE) && defined (TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER) - RESET_SPECIAL (_rl_tty_chars.t_werase); -# endif /* VWERASE && TERMIOS_TTY_DRIVER */ -} - -#if defined (HANDLE_SIGNALS) - -#if defined (NEW_TTY_DRIVER) || defined (NO_TTY_DRIVER) -int -_rl_disable_tty_signals () -{ - return 0; -} - -int -_rl_restore_tty_signals () -{ - return 0; -} -#else - -static TIOTYPE sigstty, nosigstty; -static int tty_sigs_disabled = 0; - -int -_rl_disable_tty_signals () -{ - if (tty_sigs_disabled) - return 0; - - if (_get_tty_settings (fileno (rl_instream), &sigstty) < 0) - return -1; - - nosigstty = sigstty; - - nosigstty.c_lflag &= ~ISIG; - nosigstty.c_iflag &= ~IXON; - - if (_set_tty_settings (fileno (rl_instream), &nosigstty) < 0) - return (_set_tty_settings (fileno (rl_instream), &sigstty)); - - tty_sigs_disabled = 1; - return 0; -} - -int -_rl_restore_tty_signals () -{ - int r; - - if (tty_sigs_disabled == 0) - return 0; - - r = _set_tty_settings (fileno (rl_instream), &sigstty); - - if (r == 0) - tty_sigs_disabled = 0; - - return r; -} -#endif /* !NEW_TTY_DRIVER */ - -#endif /* HANDLE_SIGNALS */ diff --git a/lib/readline/util.c~ b/lib/readline/util.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index 795cddd94..000000000 --- a/lib/readline/util.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,587 +0,0 @@ -/* util.c -- readline utility functions */ - -/* 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 . -*/ - -#define READLINE_LIBRARY - -#if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H) -# include -#endif - -#include -#include -#include "posixjmp.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include /* for _POSIX_VERSION */ -#endif /* HAVE_UNISTD_H */ - -#if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H) -# include -#else -# include "ansi_stdlib.h" -#endif /* HAVE_STDLIB_H */ - -#include -#include - -/* System-specific feature definitions and include files. */ -#include "rldefs.h" -#include "rlmbutil.h" - -#if defined (TIOCSTAT_IN_SYS_IOCTL) -# include -#endif /* TIOCSTAT_IN_SYS_IOCTL */ - -/* Some standard library routines. */ -#include "readline.h" - -#include "rlprivate.h" -#include "xmalloc.h" - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Utility Functions */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Return 0 if C is not a member of the class of characters that belong - in words, or 1 if it is. */ - -int _rl_allow_pathname_alphabetic_chars = 0; -static const char * const pathname_alphabetic_chars = "/-_=~.#$"; - -int -rl_alphabetic (c) - int c; -{ - if (ALPHABETIC (c)) - return (1); - - return (_rl_allow_pathname_alphabetic_chars && - strchr (pathname_alphabetic_chars, c) != NULL); -} - -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) -int -_rl_walphabetic (wchar_t wc) -{ - int c; - - if (iswalnum (wc)) - return (1); - - c = wc & 0177; - return (_rl_allow_pathname_alphabetic_chars && - strchr (pathname_alphabetic_chars, c) != NULL); -} -#endif - -/* How to abort things. */ -int -_rl_abort_internal () -{ - rl_ding (); - rl_clear_message (); - _rl_reset_argument (); - rl_clear_pending_input (); - - RL_UNSETSTATE (RL_STATE_MACRODEF); - while (rl_executing_macro) - _rl_pop_executing_macro (); - - rl_last_func = (rl_command_func_t *)NULL; -#if defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGSETJMP) - siglongjmp (_rl_top_level, 1); -#else - longjmp (_rl_top_level, 1); -#endif - return (0); -} - -int -rl_abort (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return (_rl_abort_internal ()); -} - -int -_rl_null_function (count, key) - int count, key; -{ - return 0; -} - -int -rl_tty_status (count, key) - int count, key; -{ -#if defined (TIOCSTAT) - ioctl (1, TIOCSTAT, (char *)0); - rl_refresh_line (count, key); -#else - rl_ding (); -#endif - return 0; -} - -/* Return a copy of the string between FROM and TO. - FROM is inclusive, TO is not. */ -char * -rl_copy_text (from, to) - int from, to; -{ - register int length; - char *copy; - - /* Fix it if the caller is confused. */ - if (from > to) - SWAP (from, to); - - length = to - from; - copy = (char *)xmalloc (1 + length); - strncpy (copy, rl_line_buffer + from, length); - copy[length] = '\0'; - return (copy); -} - -/* Increase the size of RL_LINE_BUFFER until it has enough space to hold - LEN characters. */ -void -rl_extend_line_buffer (len) - int len; -{ - while (len >= rl_line_buffer_len) - { - rl_line_buffer_len += DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE; - rl_line_buffer = (char *)xrealloc (rl_line_buffer, rl_line_buffer_len); - } - - _rl_set_the_line (); -} - - -/* A function for simple tilde expansion. */ -int -rl_tilde_expand (ignore, key) - int ignore, key; -{ - register int start, end; - char *homedir, *temp; - int len; - - end = rl_point; - start = end - 1; - - if (rl_point == rl_end && rl_line_buffer[rl_point] == '~') - { - homedir = tilde_expand ("~"); - _rl_replace_text (homedir, start, end); - xfree (homedir); - return (0); - } - else if (rl_line_buffer[start] != '~') - { - for (; !whitespace (rl_line_buffer[start]) && start >= 0; start--) - ; - start++; - } - - end = start; - do - end++; - while (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[end]) == 0 && end < rl_end); - - if (whitespace (rl_line_buffer[end]) || end >= rl_end) - end--; - - /* If the first character of the current word is a tilde, perform - tilde expansion and insert the result. If not a tilde, do - nothing. */ - if (rl_line_buffer[start] == '~') - { - len = end - start + 1; - temp = (char *)xmalloc (len + 1); - strncpy (temp, rl_line_buffer + start, len); - temp[len] = '\0'; - homedir = tilde_expand (temp); - xfree (temp); - - _rl_replace_text (homedir, start, end); - xfree (homedir); - } - - return (0); -} - -#if defined (USE_VARARGS) -void -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -_rl_ttymsg (const char *format, ...) -#else -_rl_ttymsg (va_alist) - va_dcl -#endif -{ - va_list args; -#if defined (PREFER_VARARGS) - char *format; -#endif - -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) - va_start (args, format); -#else - va_start (args); - format = va_arg (args, char *); -#endif - - fprintf (stderr, "readline: "); - vfprintf (stderr, format, args); - fprintf (stderr, "\n"); - fflush (stderr); - - va_end (args); - - rl_forced_update_display (); -} - -void -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -_rl_errmsg (const char *format, ...) -#else -_rl_errmsg (va_alist) - va_dcl -#endif -{ - va_list args; -#if defined (PREFER_VARARGS) - char *format; -#endif - -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) - va_start (args, format); -#else - va_start (args); - format = va_arg (args, char *); -#endif - - fprintf (stderr, "readline: "); - vfprintf (stderr, format, args); - fprintf (stderr, "\n"); - fflush (stderr); - - va_end (args); -} - -#else /* !USE_VARARGS */ -void -_rl_ttymsg (format, arg1, arg2) - char *format; -{ - fprintf (stderr, "readline: "); - fprintf (stderr, format, arg1, arg2); - fprintf (stderr, "\n"); - - rl_forced_update_display (); -} - -void -_rl_errmsg (format, arg1, arg2) - char *format; -{ - fprintf (stderr, "readline: "); - fprintf (stderr, format, arg1, arg2); - fprintf (stderr, "\n"); -} -#endif /* !USE_VARARGS */ - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* String Utility Functions */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Determine if s2 occurs in s1. If so, return a pointer to the - match in s1. The compare is case insensitive. */ -char * -_rl_strindex (s1, s2) - register const char *s1, *s2; -{ - register int i, l, len; - - for (i = 0, l = strlen (s2), len = strlen (s1); (len - i) >= l; i++) - if (_rl_strnicmp (s1 + i, s2, l) == 0) - return ((char *) (s1 + i)); - return ((char *)NULL); -} - -#ifndef HAVE_STRPBRK -/* Find the first occurrence in STRING1 of any character from STRING2. - Return a pointer to the character in STRING1. */ -char * -_rl_strpbrk (string1, string2) - const char *string1, *string2; -{ - register const char *scan; -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) - mbstate_t ps; - register int i, v; - - memset (&ps, 0, sizeof (mbstate_t)); -#endif - - for (; *string1; string1++) - { - for (scan = string2; *scan; scan++) - { - if (*string1 == *scan) - return ((char *)string1); - } -#if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) - if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) - { - v = _rl_get_char_len (string1, &ps); - if (v > 1) - string1 += v - 1; /* -1 to account for auto-increment in loop */ - } -#endif - } - return ((char *)NULL); -} -#endif - -#if !defined (HAVE_STRCASECMP) -/* Compare at most COUNT characters from string1 to string2. Case - doesn't matter (strncasecmp). */ -int -_rl_strnicmp (string1, string2, count) - char *string1, *string2; - int count; -{ - register char *s1, *s2; - int d; - - if (count <= 0 || (string1 == string2)) - return 0; - - s1 = string1; - s2 = string2; - do - { - d = _rl_to_lower (*s1) - _rl_to_lower (*s2); /* XXX - cast to unsigned char? */ - if (d != 0) - return d; - if (*s1++ == '\0') - break; - s2++; - } - while (--count != 0); - - return (0); -} - -/* strcmp (), but caseless (strcasecmp). */ -int -_rl_stricmp (string1, string2) - char *string1, *string2; -{ - register char *s1, *s2; - int d; - - s1 = string1; - s2 = string2; - - if (s1 == s2) - return 0; - - while ((d = _rl_to_lower (*s1) - _rl_to_lower (*s2)) == 0) - { - if (*s1++ == '\0') - return 0; - s2++; - } - - return (d); -} -#endif /* !HAVE_STRCASECMP */ - -/* Stupid comparison routine for qsort () ing strings. */ -int -_rl_qsort_string_compare (s1, s2) - char **s1, **s2; -{ -#if defined (HAVE_STRCOLL) - return (strcoll (*s1, *s2)); -#else - int result; - - result = **s1 - **s2; - if (result == 0) - result = strcmp (*s1, *s2); - - return result; -#endif -} - -/* Function equivalents for the macros defined in chardefs.h. */ -#define FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO(f) int (f) (c) int c; { return f (c); } - -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_digit_p) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_digit_value) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_lowercase_p) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_pure_alphabetic) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_to_lower) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_to_upper) -FUNCTION_FOR_MACRO (_rl_uppercase_p) - -/* A convenience function, to force memory deallocation to be performed - by readline. DLLs on Windows apparently require this. */ -void -rl_free (mem) - void *mem; -{ - if (mem) - free (mem); -} - -/* Backwards compatibility, now that savestring has been removed from - all `public' readline header files. */ -#undef _rl_savestring -char * -_rl_savestring (s) - const char *s; -{ - return (strcpy ((char *)xmalloc (1 + (int)strlen (s)), (s))); -} - -#if defined (USE_VARARGS) -static FILE *_rl_tracefp; - -void -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -_rl_trace (const char *format, ...) -#else -_rl_trace (va_alist) - va_dcl -#endif -{ - va_list args; -#if defined (PREFER_VARARGS) - char *format; -#endif - -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) - va_start (args, format); -#else - va_start (args); - format = va_arg (args, char *); -#endif - - if (_rl_tracefp == 0) - _rl_tropen (); - vfprintf (_rl_tracefp, format, args); - fprintf (_rl_tracefp, "\n"); - fflush (_rl_tracefp); - - va_end (args); -} - -int -_rl_tropen () -{ - char fnbuf[128]; - - if (_rl_tracefp) - fclose (_rl_tracefp); - sprintf (fnbuf, "/var/tmp/rltrace.%ld", (long)getpid()); - unlink(fnbuf); - _rl_tracefp = fopen (fnbuf, "w+"); - return _rl_tracefp != 0; -} - -int -_rl_trclose () -{ - int r; - - r = fclose (_rl_tracefp); - _rl_tracefp = 0; - return r; -} - -void -_rl_settracefp (fp) - FILE *fp; -{ - _rl_tracefp = fp; -} -#endif - - -#if HAVE_DECL_AUDIT_USER_TTY && defined (ENABLE_TTY_AUDIT_SUPPORT) -#include -#include -#include - -/* Report STRING to the audit system. */ -void -_rl_audit_tty (string) - char *string; -{ - struct sockaddr_nl addr; - struct msghdr msg; - struct nlmsghdr nlm; - struct iovec iov[2]; - size_t size; - int fd; - - fd = socket (AF_NETLINK, SOCK_RAW, NETLINK_AUDIT); - if (fd < 0) - return; - size = strlen (string) + 1; - - nlm.nlmsg_len = NLMSG_LENGTH (size); - nlm.nlmsg_type = AUDIT_USER_TTY; - nlm.nlmsg_flags = NLM_F_REQUEST; - nlm.nlmsg_seq = 0; - nlm.nlmsg_pid = 0; - - iov[0].iov_base = &nlm; - iov[0].iov_len = sizeof (nlm); - iov[1].iov_base = string; - iov[1].iov_len = size; - - addr.nl_family = AF_NETLINK; - addr.nl_pid = 0; - addr.nl_groups = 0; - - msg.msg_name = &addr; - msg.msg_namelen = sizeof (addr); - msg.msg_iov = iov; - msg.msg_iovlen = 2; - msg.msg_control = NULL; - msg.msg_controllen = 0; - msg.msg_flags = 0; - - (void)sendmsg (fd, &msg, 0); - close (fd); -} -#endif diff --git a/pcomplete.c~ b/pcomplete.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index 6b4e03323..000000000 --- a/pcomplete.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1631 +0,0 @@ -/* pcomplete.c - functions to generate lists of matches for programmable completion. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1999-2012 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#include - -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -# include -#else -# include -#endif - -#include - -#include -#include "bashansi.h" -#include "bashintl.h" - -#include "shell.h" -#include "pcomplete.h" -#include "alias.h" -#include "bashline.h" -#include "execute_cmd.h" -#include "pathexp.h" - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) -# include "jobs.h" -#endif - -#if !defined (NSIG) -# include "trap.h" -#endif - -#include "shmbutil.h" - -#include "builtins.h" -#include "builtins/common.h" -#include "builtins/builtext.h" - -#include -#include - -#include -#include -#include - -#define PCOMP_RETRYFAIL 256 - -#ifdef STRDUP -# undef STRDUP -#endif -#define STRDUP(x) ((x) ? savestring (x) : (char *)NULL) - -typedef SHELL_VAR **SVFUNC (); - -#ifndef HAVE_STRPBRK -extern char *strpbrk __P((char *, char *)); -#endif - -extern int array_needs_making; -extern STRING_INT_ALIST word_token_alist[]; -extern char *signal_names[]; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *last_shell_builtin, *this_shell_builtin; - -#if defined (DEBUG) -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -static void debug_printf (const char *, ...) __attribute__((__format__ (printf, 1, 2))); -#endif -#endif /* DEBUG */ - -static int it_init_joblist __P((ITEMLIST *, int)); - -static int it_init_aliases __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_arrayvars __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_bindings __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_builtins __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_disabled __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_enabled __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_exported __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_functions __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_helptopics __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_hostnames __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_jobs __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_running __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_stopped __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_keywords __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_signals __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_variables __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_setopts __P((ITEMLIST *)); -static int it_init_shopts __P((ITEMLIST *)); - -static int shouldexp_filterpat __P((char *)); -static char *preproc_filterpat __P((char *, char *)); - -static void init_itemlist_from_varlist __P((ITEMLIST *, SVFUNC *)); - -static STRINGLIST *gen_matches_from_itemlist __P((ITEMLIST *, const char *)); -static STRINGLIST *gen_action_completions __P((COMPSPEC *, const char *)); -static STRINGLIST *gen_globpat_matches __P((COMPSPEC *, const char *)); -static STRINGLIST *gen_wordlist_matches __P((COMPSPEC *, const char *)); -static STRINGLIST *gen_shell_function_matches __P((COMPSPEC *, const char *, - const char *, - char *, int, WORD_LIST *, - int, int, int *)); -static STRINGLIST *gen_command_matches __P((COMPSPEC *, const char *, - const char *, - char *, int, WORD_LIST *, - int, int)); - -static STRINGLIST *gen_progcomp_completions __P((const char *, const char *, - const char *, - int, int, int *, int *, - COMPSPEC **)); - -static char *pcomp_filename_completion_function __P((const char *, int)); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *bind_comp_words __P((WORD_LIST *)); -#endif -static void bind_compfunc_variables __P((char *, int, WORD_LIST *, int, int)); -static void unbind_compfunc_variables __P((int)); -static WORD_LIST *build_arg_list __P((char *, const char *, const char *, WORD_LIST *, int)); -static WORD_LIST *command_line_to_word_list __P((char *, int, int, int *, int *)); - -#ifdef DEBUG -static int progcomp_debug = 0; -#endif - -int prog_completion_enabled = 1; - -/* These are used to manage the arrays of strings for possible completions. */ -ITEMLIST it_aliases = { 0, it_init_aliases, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_arrayvars = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_arrayvars, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_bindings = { 0, it_init_bindings, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_builtins = { 0, it_init_builtins, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_commands = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_directories = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_disabled = { 0, it_init_disabled, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_enabled = { 0, it_init_enabled, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_exports = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_exported, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_files = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_functions = { 0, it_init_functions, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_helptopics = { 0, it_init_helptopics, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_hostnames = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_hostnames, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_groups = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_jobs = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_jobs, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_keywords = { 0, it_init_keywords, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_running = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_running, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_services = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_setopts = { 0, it_init_setopts, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_shopts = { 0, it_init_shopts, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_signals = { 0, it_init_signals, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_stopped = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_stopped, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; -ITEMLIST it_users = { LIST_DYNAMIC }; /* unused */ -ITEMLIST it_variables = { LIST_DYNAMIC, it_init_variables, (STRINGLIST *)0 }; - -COMPSPEC *pcomp_curcs; -const char *pcomp_curcmd; - -#ifdef DEBUG -/* Debugging code */ -static void -#if defined (PREFER_STDARG) -debug_printf (const char *format, ...) -#else -debug_printf (format, va_alist) - const char *format; - va_dcl -#endif -{ - va_list args; - - if (progcomp_debug == 0) - return; - - SH_VA_START (args, format); - - fprintf (stdout, "DEBUG: "); - vfprintf (stdout, format, args); - fprintf (stdout, "\n"); - - rl_on_new_line (); - - va_end (args); -} -#endif - -/* Functions to manage the item lists */ - -void -set_itemlist_dirty (it) - ITEMLIST *it; -{ - it->flags |= LIST_DIRTY; -} - -void -initialize_itemlist (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - (*itp->list_getter) (itp); - itp->flags |= LIST_INITIALIZED; - itp->flags &= ~LIST_DIRTY; -} - -void -clean_itemlist (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = itp->slist; - if (sl) - { - if ((itp->flags & (LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS|LIST_DONTFREE)) == 0) - strvec_flush (sl->list); - if ((itp->flags & LIST_DONTFREE) == 0) - free (sl->list); - free (sl); - } - itp->slist = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; - itp->flags &= ~(LIST_DONTFREE|LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS|LIST_INITIALIZED|LIST_DIRTY); -} - - -static int -shouldexp_filterpat (s) - char *s; -{ - register char *p; - - for (p = s; p && *p; p++) - { - if (*p == '\\') - p++; - else if (*p == '&') - return 1; - } - return 0; -} - -/* Replace any instance of `&' in PAT with TEXT. Backslash may be used to - quote a `&' and inhibit substitution. Returns a new string. This just - calls stringlib.c:strcreplace(). */ -static char * -preproc_filterpat (pat, text) - char *pat; - char *text; -{ - char *ret; - - ret = strcreplace (pat, '&', text, 1); - return ret; -} - -/* Remove any match of FILTERPAT from SL. A `&' in FILTERPAT is replaced by - TEXT. A leading `!' in FILTERPAT negates the pattern; in this case - any member of SL->list that does *not* match will be removed. This returns - a new STRINGLIST with the matching members of SL *copied*. Any - non-matching members of SL->list are *freed*. */ -STRINGLIST * -filter_stringlist (sl, filterpat, text) - STRINGLIST *sl; - char *filterpat, *text; -{ - int i, m, not; - STRINGLIST *ret; - char *npat, *t; - - if (sl == 0 || sl->list == 0 || sl->list_len == 0) - return sl; - - npat = shouldexp_filterpat (filterpat) ? preproc_filterpat (filterpat, text) : filterpat; - - not = (npat[0] == '!'); - t = not ? npat + 1 : npat; - - ret = strlist_create (sl->list_size); - for (i = 0; i < sl->list_len; i++) - { - m = strmatch (t, sl->list[i], FNMATCH_EXTFLAG); - if ((not && m == FNM_NOMATCH) || (not == 0 && m != FNM_NOMATCH)) - free (sl->list[i]); - else - ret->list[ret->list_len++] = sl->list[i]; - } - - ret->list[ret->list_len] = (char *)NULL; - if (npat != filterpat) - free (npat); - - return ret; -} - -/* Turn an array of strings returned by rl_completion_matches into a STRINGLIST. - This understands how rl_completion_matches sets matches[0] (the lcd of the - strings in the list, unless it's the only match). */ -STRINGLIST * -completions_to_stringlist (matches) - char **matches; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - int mlen, i, n; - - mlen = (matches == 0) ? 0 : strvec_len (matches); - sl = strlist_create (mlen + 1); - - if (matches == 0 || matches[0] == 0) - return sl; - - if (matches[1] == 0) - { - sl->list[0] = STRDUP (matches[0]); - sl->list[sl->list_len = 1] = (char *)NULL; - return sl; - } - - for (i = 1, n = 0; i < mlen; i++, n++) - sl->list[n] = STRDUP (matches[i]); - sl->list_len = n; - sl->list[n] = (char *)NULL; - - return sl; -} - -/* Functions to manage the various ITEMLISTs that we populate internally. - The caller is responsible for setting ITP->flags correctly. */ - -static int -it_init_aliases (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ -#ifdef ALIAS - alias_t **alias_list; - register int i, n; - STRINGLIST *sl; - - alias_list = all_aliases (); - if (alias_list == 0) - { - itp->slist = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; - return 0; - } - for (n = 0; alias_list[n]; n++) - ; - sl = strlist_create (n+1); - for (i = 0; i < n; i++) - sl->list[i] = STRDUP (alias_list[i]->name); - sl->list[n] = (char *)NULL; - sl->list_size = sl->list_len = n; - itp->slist = sl; -#else - itp->slist = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; -#endif - free (alias_list); - return 1; -} - -static void -init_itemlist_from_varlist (itp, svfunc) - ITEMLIST *itp; - SVFUNC *svfunc; -{ - SHELL_VAR **vlist; - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - vlist = (*svfunc) (); - if (vlist == 0) - { - itp->slist = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; - return; - } - for (n = 0; vlist[n]; n++) - ; - sl = strlist_create (n+1); - for (i = 0; i < n; i++) - sl->list[i] = savestring (vlist[i]->name); - sl->list[sl->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - itp->slist = sl; -} - -static int -it_init_arrayvars (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - init_itemlist_from_varlist (itp, all_array_variables); - return 1; -#else - return 0; -#endif -} - -static int -it_init_bindings (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - char **blist; - STRINGLIST *sl; - - /* rl_funmap_names allocates blist, but not its members */ - blist = (char **)rl_funmap_names (); /* XXX fix const later */ - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = blist; - sl->list_size = 0; - sl->list_len = strvec_len (sl->list); - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_builtins (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - sl = strlist_create (num_shell_builtins); - for (i = n = 0; i < num_shell_builtins; i++) - if (shell_builtins[i].function) - sl->list[n++] = shell_builtins[i].name; - sl->list[sl->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_enabled (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - sl = strlist_create (num_shell_builtins); - for (i = n = 0; i < num_shell_builtins; i++) - { - if (shell_builtins[i].function && (shell_builtins[i].flags & BUILTIN_ENABLED)) - sl->list[n++] = shell_builtins[i].name; - } - sl->list[sl->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_disabled (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - sl = strlist_create (num_shell_builtins); - for (i = n = 0; i < num_shell_builtins; i++) - { - if (shell_builtins[i].function && ((shell_builtins[i].flags & BUILTIN_ENABLED) == 0)) - sl->list[n++] = shell_builtins[i].name; - } - sl->list[sl->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_exported (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - init_itemlist_from_varlist (itp, all_exported_variables); - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_functions (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - init_itemlist_from_varlist (itp, all_visible_functions); - return 0; -} - -/* Like it_init_builtins, but includes everything the help builtin looks at, - not just builtins with an active implementing function. */ -static int -it_init_helptopics (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - sl = strlist_create (num_shell_builtins); - for (i = n = 0; i < num_shell_builtins; i++) - sl->list[n++] = shell_builtins[i].name; - sl->list[sl->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_hostnames (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = get_hostname_list (); - sl->list_len = sl->list ? strvec_len (sl->list) : 0; - sl->list_size = sl->list_len; - itp->slist = sl; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS|LIST_DONTFREE; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_joblist (itp, jstate) - ITEMLIST *itp; - int jstate; -{ -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i; - register PROCESS *p; - char *s, *t; - JOB *j; - JOB_STATE ws; /* wanted state */ - - ws = JNONE; - if (jstate == 0) - ws = JRUNNING; - else if (jstate == 1) - ws = JSTOPPED; - - sl = strlist_create (js.j_jobslots); - for (i = js.j_jobslots - 1; i >= 0; i--) - { - j = get_job_by_jid (i); - if (j == 0) - continue; - p = j->pipe; - if (jstate == -1 || JOBSTATE(i) == ws) - { - s = savestring (p->command); - t = strpbrk (s, " \t\n"); - if (t) - *t = '\0'; - sl->list[sl->list_len++] = s; - } - } - itp->slist = sl; -#else - itp->slist = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; -#endif - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_jobs (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - return (it_init_joblist (itp, -1)); -} - -static int -it_init_running (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - return (it_init_joblist (itp, 0)); -} - -static int -it_init_stopped (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - return (it_init_joblist (itp, 1)); -} - -static int -it_init_keywords (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - register int i, n; - - for (n = 0; word_token_alist[n].word; n++) - ; - sl = strlist_create (n); - for (i = 0; i < n; i++) - sl->list[i] = word_token_alist[i].word; - sl->list[sl->list_len = i] = (char *)NULL; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_signals (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = signal_names; - sl->list_len = strvec_len (sl->list); - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREE; - itp->slist = sl; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_variables (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - init_itemlist_from_varlist (itp, all_visible_variables); - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_setopts (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = get_minus_o_opts (); - sl->list_len = strvec_len (sl->list); - itp->slist = sl; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - return 0; -} - -static int -it_init_shopts (itp) - ITEMLIST *itp; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = get_shopt_options (); - sl->list_len = strvec_len (sl->list); - itp->slist = sl; - itp->flags |= LIST_DONTFREEMEMBERS; - return 0; -} - -/* Generate a list of all matches for TEXT using the STRINGLIST in itp->slist - as the list of possibilities. If the itemlist has been marked dirty or - it should be regenerated every time, destroy the old STRINGLIST and make a - new one before trying the match. TEXT is dequoted before attempting a - match. */ -static STRINGLIST * -gen_matches_from_itemlist (itp, text) - ITEMLIST *itp; - const char *text; -{ - STRINGLIST *ret, *sl; - int tlen, i, n; - char *ntxt; - - if ((itp->flags & (LIST_DIRTY|LIST_DYNAMIC)) || - (itp->flags & LIST_INITIALIZED) == 0) - { - if (itp->flags & (LIST_DIRTY|LIST_DYNAMIC)) - clean_itemlist (itp); - if ((itp->flags & LIST_INITIALIZED) == 0) - initialize_itemlist (itp); - } - if (itp->slist == 0) - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - ret = strlist_create (itp->slist->list_len+1); - sl = itp->slist; - - ntxt = bash_dequote_text (text); - tlen = STRLEN (ntxt); - - for (i = n = 0; i < sl->list_len; i++) - { - if (tlen == 0 || STREQN (sl->list[i], ntxt, tlen)) - ret->list[n++] = STRDUP (sl->list[i]); - } - ret->list[ret->list_len = n] = (char *)NULL; - - FREE (ntxt); - return ret; -} - -/* A wrapper for rl_filename_completion_function that dequotes the filename - before attempting completions. */ -static char * -pcomp_filename_completion_function (text, state) - const char *text; - int state; -{ - static char *dfn; /* dequoted filename */ - int qc; - int iscompgen, iscompleting; - - if (state == 0) - { - FREE (dfn); - /* remove backslashes quoting special characters in filenames. */ - /* There are roughly three paths we can follow to get here: - 1. complete -f - 2. compgen -f "$word" from a completion function - 3. compgen -f "$word" from the command line - They all need to be handled. - - In the first two cases, readline will run the filename dequoting - function in rl_filename_completion_function if it found a filename - quoting character in the word to be completed - (rl_completion_found_quote). We run the dequoting function here - if we're running compgen, we're not completing, and the - rl_filename_completion_function won't dequote the filename - (rl_completion_found_quote == 0). */ - iscompgen = this_shell_builtin == compgen_builtin; - iscompleting = RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_COMPLETING); - if (iscompgen && iscompleting == 0 && rl_completion_found_quote == 0) - { - /* Use rl_completion_quote_character because any single or - double quotes have been removed by the time TEXT makes it - here, and we don't want to remove backslashes inside - quoted strings. */ - dfn = (*rl_filename_dequoting_function) ((char *)text, rl_completion_quote_character); - } - else - dfn = savestring (text); - } - - return (rl_filename_completion_function (dfn, state)); -} - -#define GEN_COMPS(bmap, flag, it, text, glist, tlist) \ - do { \ - if (bmap & flag) \ - { \ - tlist = gen_matches_from_itemlist (it, text); \ - if (tlist) \ - { \ - glist = strlist_append (glist, tlist); \ - strlist_dispose (tlist); \ - } \ - } \ - } while (0) - -#define GEN_XCOMPS(bmap, flag, text, func, cmatches, glist, tlist) \ - do { \ - if (bmap & flag) \ - { \ - cmatches = rl_completion_matches (text, func); \ - tlist = completions_to_stringlist (cmatches); \ - glist = strlist_append (glist, tlist); \ - strvec_dispose (cmatches); \ - strlist_dispose (tlist); \ - } \ - } while (0) - -/* Functions to generate lists of matches from the actions member of CS. */ - -static STRINGLIST * -gen_action_completions (cs, text) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *text; -{ - STRINGLIST *ret, *tmatches; - char **cmatches; /* from rl_completion_matches ... */ - unsigned long flags; - int t; - - ret = tmatches = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; - flags = cs->actions; - - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_ALIAS, &it_aliases, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_ARRAYVAR, &it_arrayvars, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_BINDING, &it_bindings, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_BUILTIN, &it_builtins, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_DISABLED, &it_disabled, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_ENABLED, &it_enabled, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_EXPORT, &it_exports, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_FUNCTION, &it_functions, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_HELPTOPIC, &it_helptopics, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_HOSTNAME, &it_hostnames, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_JOB, &it_jobs, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_KEYWORD, &it_keywords, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_RUNNING, &it_running, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_SETOPT, &it_setopts, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_SHOPT, &it_shopts, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_SIGNAL, &it_signals, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_STOPPED, &it_stopped, text, ret, tmatches); - GEN_COMPS (flags, CA_VARIABLE, &it_variables, text, ret, tmatches); - - GEN_XCOMPS(flags, CA_COMMAND, text, command_word_completion_function, cmatches, ret, tmatches); - GEN_XCOMPS(flags, CA_FILE, text, pcomp_filename_completion_function, cmatches, ret, tmatches); - GEN_XCOMPS(flags, CA_USER, text, rl_username_completion_function, cmatches, ret, tmatches); - GEN_XCOMPS(flags, CA_GROUP, text, bash_groupname_completion_function, cmatches, ret, tmatches); - GEN_XCOMPS(flags, CA_SERVICE, text, bash_servicename_completion_function, cmatches, ret, tmatches); - - /* And lastly, the special case for directories */ - if (flags & CA_DIRECTORY) - { - t = rl_filename_completion_desired; - rl_completion_mark_symlink_dirs = 1; /* override user preference */ - cmatches = bash_directory_completion_matches (text); - /* If we did not want filename completion before this, and there are - no matches, turn off rl_filename_completion_desired so whatever - matches we get are not treated as filenames (it gets turned on by - rl_filename_completion_function unconditionally). */ - if (t == 0 && cmatches == 0 && rl_filename_completion_desired == 1) - rl_filename_completion_desired = 0; - tmatches = completions_to_stringlist (cmatches); - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strvec_dispose (cmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - } - - return ret; -} - -/* Generate a list of matches for CS->globpat. Unresolved: should this use - TEXT as a match prefix, or just go without? Currently, the code does not - use TEXT, just globs CS->globpat and returns the results. If we do decide - to use TEXT, we should call quote_string_for_globbing before the call to - glob_filename. */ -static STRINGLIST * -gen_globpat_matches (cs, text) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *text; -{ - STRINGLIST *sl; - - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = glob_filename (cs->globpat, 0); - if (GLOB_FAILED (sl->list)) - sl->list = (char **)NULL; - if (sl->list) - sl->list_len = sl->list_size = strvec_len (sl->list); - return sl; -} - -/* Perform the shell word expansions on CS->words and return the results. - Again, this ignores TEXT. */ -static STRINGLIST * -gen_wordlist_matches (cs, text) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *text; -{ - WORD_LIST *l, *l2; - STRINGLIST *sl; - int nw, tlen; - char *ntxt; /* dequoted TEXT to use in comparisons */ - - if (cs->words == 0 || cs->words[0] == '\0') - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - - /* This used to be a simple expand_string(cs->words, 0), but that won't - do -- there's no way to split a simple list into individual words - that way, since the shell semantics say that word splitting is done - only on the results of expansion. split_at_delims also handles embedded - quoted strings and preserves the quotes for the expand_words_shellexp - function call that follows. */ - /* XXX - this is where this function spends most of its time */ - l = split_at_delims (cs->words, strlen (cs->words), (char *)NULL, -1, 0, (int *)NULL, (int *)NULL); - if (l == 0) - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - /* This will jump back to the top level if the expansion fails... */ - l2 = expand_words_shellexp (l); - dispose_words (l); - - nw = list_length (l2); - sl = strlist_create (nw + 1); - - ntxt = bash_dequote_text (text); - tlen = STRLEN (ntxt); - - for (nw = 0, l = l2; l; l = l->next) - { - if (tlen == 0 || STREQN (l->word->word, ntxt, tlen)) - sl->list[nw++] = STRDUP (l->word->word); - } - sl->list[sl->list_len = nw] = (char *)NULL; - - dispose_words (l2); - FREE (ntxt); - return sl; -} - -#ifdef ARRAY_VARS - -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_comp_words (lwords) - WORD_LIST *lwords; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("COMP_WORDS"); - if (v == 0) - v = make_new_array_variable ("COMP_WORDS"); - if (readonly_p (v)) - VUNSETATTR (v, att_readonly); - if (array_p (v) == 0) - v = convert_var_to_array (v); - v = assign_array_var_from_word_list (v, lwords, 0); - - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - return v; -} -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -static void -bind_compfunc_variables (line, ind, lwords, cw, exported) - char *line; - int ind; - WORD_LIST *lwords; - int cw, exported; -{ - char ibuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - char *value; - SHELL_VAR *v; - size_t llen; - int c; - - /* Set the variables that the function expects while it executes. Maybe - these should be in the function environment (temporary_env). */ - v = bind_variable ("COMP_LINE", line, 0); - if (v && exported) - VSETATTR(v, att_exported); - - /* Post bash-4.2: COMP_POINT is characters instead of bytes. */ - c = line[ind]; - line[ind] = '\0'; - llen = MB_STRLEN (line); - line[ind] = c; - value = inttostr (llen, ibuf, sizeof(ibuf)); - v = bind_int_variable ("COMP_POINT", value); - if (v && exported) - VSETATTR(v, att_exported); - - value = inttostr (rl_completion_type, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf)); - v = bind_int_variable ("COMP_TYPE", value); - if (v && exported) - VSETATTR(v, att_exported); - - value = inttostr (rl_completion_invoking_key, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf)); - v = bind_int_variable ("COMP_KEY", value); - if (v && exported) - VSETATTR(v, att_exported); - - /* Since array variables can't be exported, we don't bother making the - array of words. */ - if (exported == 0) - { -#ifdef ARRAY_VARS - v = bind_comp_words (lwords); - value = inttostr (cw, ibuf, sizeof(ibuf)); - bind_int_variable ("COMP_CWORD", value); -#endif - } - else - array_needs_making = 1; -} - -static void -unbind_compfunc_variables (exported) - int exported; -{ - unbind_variable ("COMP_LINE"); - unbind_variable ("COMP_POINT"); - unbind_variable ("COMP_TYPE"); - unbind_variable ("COMP_KEY"); -#ifdef ARRAY_VARS - unbind_variable ("COMP_WORDS"); - unbind_variable ("COMP_CWORD"); -#endif - if (exported) - array_needs_making = 1; -} - -/* Build the list of words to pass to a function or external command - as arguments. When the function or command is invoked, - - $0 == function or command being invoked - $1 == command name - $2 == word to be completed (possibly null) - $3 == previous word - - Functions can access all of the words in the current command line - with the COMP_WORDS array. External commands cannot; they have to - make do with the COMP_LINE and COMP_POINT variables. */ - -static WORD_LIST * -build_arg_list (cmd, cname, text, lwords, ind) - char *cmd; - const char *cname; - const char *text; - WORD_LIST *lwords; - int ind; -{ - WORD_LIST *ret, *cl, *l; - WORD_DESC *w; - int i; - - ret = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - w = make_word (cmd); - ret = make_word_list (w, (WORD_LIST *)NULL); /* $0 */ - - w = make_word (cname); /* $1 */ - cl = ret->next = make_word_list (w, (WORD_LIST *)NULL); - - w = make_word (text); - cl->next = make_word_list (w, (WORD_LIST *)NULL); /* $2 */ - cl = cl->next; - - /* Search lwords for current word */ - for (l = lwords, i = 1; l && i < ind-1; l = l->next, i++) - ; - w = (l && l->word) ? copy_word (l->word) : make_word (""); - cl->next = make_word_list (w, (WORD_LIST *)NULL); - - return ret; -} - -/* Build a command string with - $0 == cs->funcname (function to execute for completion list) - $1 == command name (command being completed) - $2 = word to be completed (possibly null) - $3 = previous word - and run in the current shell. The function should put its completion - list into the array variable COMPREPLY. We build a STRINGLIST - from the results and return it. - - Since the shell function should return its list of matches in an array - variable, this does nothing if arrays are not compiled into the shell. */ - -static STRINGLIST * -gen_shell_function_matches (cs, cmd, text, line, ind, lwords, nw, cw, foundp) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *cmd; - const char *text; - char *line; - int ind; - WORD_LIST *lwords; - int nw, cw; - int *foundp; -{ - char *funcname; - STRINGLIST *sl; - SHELL_VAR *f, *v; - WORD_LIST *cmdlist; - int fval, found; - sh_parser_state_t ps; - sh_parser_state_t * restrict pps; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ARRAY *a; -#endif - - found = 0; - if (foundp) - *foundp = found; - - funcname = cs->funcname; - f = find_function (funcname); - if (f == 0) - { - internal_error (_("completion: function `%s' not found"), funcname); - rl_ding (); - rl_on_new_line (); - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - } - -#if !defined (ARRAY_VARS) - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); -#else - - /* We pass cw - 1 because command_line_to_word_list returns indices that are - 1-based, while bash arrays are 0-based. */ - bind_compfunc_variables (line, ind, lwords, cw - 1, 0); - - cmdlist = build_arg_list (funcname, cmd, text, lwords, cw); - - pps = &ps; - save_parser_state (pps); - begin_unwind_frame ("gen-shell-function-matches"); - add_unwind_protect (restore_parser_state, (char *)pps); - add_unwind_protect (dispose_words, (char *)cmdlist); - add_unwind_protect (unbind_compfunc_variables, (char *)0); - - fval = execute_shell_function (f, cmdlist); - - discard_unwind_frame ("gen-shell-function-matches"); - restore_parser_state (pps); - - found = fval != EX_NOTFOUND; - if (fval == EX_RETRYFAIL) - found |= PCOMP_RETRYFAIL; - if (foundp) - *foundp = found; - - /* Now clean up and destroy everything. */ - dispose_words (cmdlist); - unbind_compfunc_variables (0); - - /* The list of completions is returned in the array variable COMPREPLY. */ - v = find_variable ("COMPREPLY"); - if (v == 0) - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - if (array_p (v) == 0) - v = convert_var_to_array (v); - - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - - a = array_cell (v); - if (found == 0 || (found & PCOMP_RETRYFAIL) || a == 0 || array_empty (a)) - sl = (STRINGLIST *)NULL; - else - { - /* XXX - should we filter the list of completions so only those matching - TEXT are returned? Right now, we do not. */ - sl = strlist_create (0); - sl->list = array_to_argv (a); - sl->list_len = sl->list_size = array_num_elements (a); - } - - /* XXX - should we unbind COMPREPLY here? */ - unbind_variable ("COMPREPLY"); - - return (sl); -#endif -} - -/* Build a command string with - $0 == cs->command (command to execute for completion list) - $1 == command name (command being completed) - $2 = word to be completed (possibly null) - $3 = previous word - and run in with command substitution. Parse the results, one word - per line, with backslashes allowed to escape newlines. Build a - STRINGLIST from the results and return it. */ - -static STRINGLIST * -gen_command_matches (cs, cmd, text, line, ind, lwords, nw, cw) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *cmd; - const char *text; - char *line; - int ind; - WORD_LIST *lwords; - int nw, cw; -{ - char *csbuf, *cscmd, *t; - int cmdlen, cmdsize, n, ws, we; - WORD_LIST *cmdlist, *cl; - WORD_DESC *tw; - STRINGLIST *sl; - - bind_compfunc_variables (line, ind, lwords, cw, 1); - cmdlist = build_arg_list (cs->command, cmd, text, lwords, cw); - - /* Estimate the size needed for the buffer. */ - n = strlen (cs->command); - cmdsize = n + 1; - for (cl = cmdlist->next; cl; cl = cl->next) - cmdsize += STRLEN (cl->word->word) + 3; - cmdsize += 2; - - /* allocate the string for the command and fill it in. */ - cscmd = (char *)xmalloc (cmdsize + 1); - - strcpy (cscmd, cs->command); /* $0 */ - cmdlen = n; - cscmd[cmdlen++] = ' '; - for (cl = cmdlist->next; cl; cl = cl->next) /* $1, $2, $3, ... */ - { - t = sh_single_quote (cl->word->word ? cl->word->word : ""); - n = strlen (t); - RESIZE_MALLOCED_BUFFER (cscmd, cmdlen, n + 2, cmdsize, 64); - strcpy (cscmd + cmdlen, t); - cmdlen += n; - if (cl->next) - cscmd[cmdlen++] = ' '; - free (t); - } - cscmd[cmdlen] = '\0'; - - tw = command_substitute (cscmd, 0); - csbuf = tw ? tw->word : (char *)NULL; - if (tw) - dispose_word_desc (tw); - - /* Now clean up and destroy everything. */ - dispose_words (cmdlist); - free (cscmd); - unbind_compfunc_variables (1); - - if (csbuf == 0 || *csbuf == '\0') - { - FREE (csbuf); - return ((STRINGLIST *)NULL); - } - - /* Now break CSBUF up at newlines, with backslash allowed to escape a - newline, and put the individual words into a STRINGLIST. */ - sl = strlist_create (16); - for (ws = 0; csbuf[ws]; ) - { - we = ws; - while (csbuf[we] && csbuf[we] != '\n') - { - if (csbuf[we] == '\\' && csbuf[we+1] == '\n') - we++; - we++; - } - t = substring (csbuf, ws, we); - if (sl->list_len >= sl->list_size - 1) - strlist_resize (sl, sl->list_size + 16); - sl->list[sl->list_len++] = t; - while (csbuf[we] == '\n') we++; - ws = we; - } - sl->list[sl->list_len] = (char *)NULL; - - free (csbuf); - return (sl); -} - -static WORD_LIST * -command_line_to_word_list (line, llen, sentinel, nwp, cwp) - char *line; - int llen, sentinel, *nwp, *cwp; -{ - WORD_LIST *ret; - char *delims; - -#if 0 - delims = "()<>;&| \t\n"; /* shell metacharacters break words */ -#else - delims = rl_completer_word_break_characters; -#endif - ret = split_at_delims (line, llen, delims, sentinel, SD_NOQUOTEDELIM, nwp, cwp); - return (ret); -} - -/* Evaluate COMPSPEC *cs and return all matches for WORD. */ - -STRINGLIST * -gen_compspec_completions (cs, cmd, word, start, end, foundp) - COMPSPEC *cs; - const char *cmd; - const char *word; - int start, end; - int *foundp; -{ - STRINGLIST *ret, *tmatches; - char *line; - int llen, nw, cw, found, foundf; - WORD_LIST *lwords; - WORD_DESC *lw; - COMPSPEC *tcs; - - found = 1; - -#ifdef DEBUG - debug_printf ("gen_compspec_completions (%s, %s, %d, %d)", cmd, word, start, end); - debug_printf ("gen_compspec_completions: %s -> %p", cmd, cs); -#endif - ret = gen_action_completions (cs, word); -#ifdef DEBUG - if (ret && progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("gen_action_completions (%p, %s) -->", cs, word); - strlist_print (ret, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - - /* Now we start generating completions based on the other members of CS. */ - if (cs->globpat) - { - tmatches = gen_globpat_matches (cs, word); - if (tmatches) - { -#ifdef DEBUG - if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("gen_globpat_matches (%p, %s) -->", cs, word); - strlist_print (tmatches, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - rl_filename_completion_desired = 1; - } - } - - if (cs->words) - { - tmatches = gen_wordlist_matches (cs, word); - if (tmatches) - { -#ifdef DEBUG - if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("gen_wordlist_matches (%p, %s) -->", cs, word); - strlist_print (tmatches, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - } - } - - lwords = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - line = (char *)NULL; - if (cs->command || cs->funcname) - { - /* If we have a command or function to execute, we need to first break - the command line into individual words, find the number of words, - and find the word in the list containing the word to be completed. */ - line = substring (rl_line_buffer, start, end); - llen = end - start; - -#ifdef DEBUG - debug_printf ("command_line_to_word_list (%s, %d, %d, %p, %p)", - line, llen, rl_point - start, &nw, &cw); -#endif - lwords = command_line_to_word_list (line, llen, rl_point - start, &nw, &cw); - /* If we skipped a NULL word at the beginning of the line, add it back */ - if (lwords && lwords->word && cmd[0] == 0 && lwords->word->word[0] != 0) - { - lw = make_bare_word (cmd); - lwords = make_word_list (lw, lwords); - nw++; - cw++; - } -#ifdef DEBUG - if (lwords == 0 && llen > 0) - debug_printf ("ERROR: command_line_to_word_list returns NULL"); - else if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("command_line_to_word_list -->"); - printf ("\t"); - print_word_list (lwords, "!"); - printf ("\n"); - fflush(stdout); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - } - - if (cs->funcname) - { - foundf = 0; - tmatches = gen_shell_function_matches (cs, cmd, word, line, rl_point - start, lwords, nw, cw, &foundf); - if (foundf != 0) - found = foundf; - if (tmatches) - { -#ifdef DEBUG - if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("gen_shell_function_matches (%p, %s, %s, %p, %d, %d) -->", cs, cmd, word, lwords, nw, cw); - strlist_print (tmatches, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - } - } - - if (cs->command) - { - tmatches = gen_command_matches (cs, cmd, word, line, rl_point - start, lwords, nw, cw); - if (tmatches) - { -#ifdef DEBUG - if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("gen_command_matches (%p, %s, %s, %p, %d, %d) -->", cs, cmd, word, lwords, nw, cw); - strlist_print (tmatches, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - } - } - - if (cs->command || cs->funcname) - { - if (lwords) - dispose_words (lwords); - FREE (line); - } - - if (foundp) - *foundp = found; - - if (found == 0 || (found & PCOMP_RETRYFAIL)) - { - strlist_dispose (ret); - return NULL; - } - - if (cs->filterpat) - { - tmatches = filter_stringlist (ret, cs->filterpat, word); -#ifdef DEBUG - if (progcomp_debug) - { - debug_printf ("filter_stringlist (%p, %s, %s) -->", ret, cs->filterpat, word); - strlist_print (tmatches, "\t"); - rl_on_new_line (); - } -#endif - if (ret && ret != tmatches) - { - FREE (ret->list); - free (ret); - } - ret = tmatches; - } - - if (cs->prefix || cs->suffix) - ret = strlist_prefix_suffix (ret, cs->prefix, cs->suffix); - - /* If no matches have been generated and the user has specified that - directory completion should be done as a default, call - gen_action_completions again to generate a list of matching directory - names. */ - if ((ret == 0 || ret->list_len == 0) && (cs->options & COPT_DIRNAMES)) - { - tcs = compspec_create (); - tcs->actions = CA_DIRECTORY; - FREE (ret); - ret = gen_action_completions (tcs, word); - compspec_dispose (tcs); - } - else if (cs->options & COPT_PLUSDIRS) - { - tcs = compspec_create (); - tcs->actions = CA_DIRECTORY; - tmatches = gen_action_completions (tcs, word); - ret = strlist_append (ret, tmatches); - strlist_dispose (tmatches); - compspec_dispose (tcs); - } - - return (ret); -} - -void -pcomp_set_readline_variables (flags, nval) - int flags, nval; -{ - /* If the user specified that the compspec returns filenames, make - sure that readline knows it. */ - if (flags & COPT_FILENAMES) - rl_filename_completion_desired = nval; - /* If the user doesn't want a space appended, tell readline. */ - if (flags & COPT_NOSPACE) - rl_completion_suppress_append = nval; - /* The value here is inverted, since the default is on and the `noquote' - option is supposed to turn it off */ - if (flags & COPT_NOQUOTE) - rl_filename_quoting_desired = 1 - nval; -} - -/* Set or unset FLAGS in the options word of the current compspec. - SET_OR_UNSET is 1 for setting, 0 for unsetting. */ -void -pcomp_set_compspec_options (cs, flags, set_or_unset) - COMPSPEC *cs; - int flags, set_or_unset; -{ - if (cs == 0 && ((cs = pcomp_curcs) == 0)) - return; - if (set_or_unset) - cs->options |= flags; - else - cs->options &= ~flags; -} - -static STRINGLIST * -gen_progcomp_completions (ocmd, cmd, word, start, end, foundp, retryp, lastcs) - const char *ocmd; - const char *cmd; - const char *word; - int start, end; - int *foundp, *retryp; - COMPSPEC **lastcs; -{ - COMPSPEC *cs, *oldcs; - const char *oldcmd; - STRINGLIST *ret; - - cs = progcomp_search (ocmd); - - if (cs == 0 || cs == *lastcs) - { -#if 0 - if (foundp) - *foundp = 0; -#endif - return (NULL); - } - - if (*lastcs) - compspec_dispose (*lastcs); - cs->refcount++; /* XXX */ - *lastcs = cs; - - cs = compspec_copy (cs); - - oldcs = pcomp_curcs; - oldcmd = pcomp_curcmd; - - pcomp_curcs = cs; - pcomp_curcmd = cmd; - - ret = gen_compspec_completions (cs, cmd, word, start, end, foundp); - - pcomp_curcs = oldcs; - pcomp_curcmd = oldcmd; - - /* We need to conditionally handle setting *retryp here */ - if (retryp) - *retryp = foundp && (*foundp & PCOMP_RETRYFAIL); - - if (foundp) - { - *foundp &= ~PCOMP_RETRYFAIL; - *foundp |= cs->options; - } - - compspec_dispose (cs); - return ret; -} - -/* The driver function for the programmable completion code. Returns a list - of matches for WORD, which is an argument to command CMD. START and END - bound the command currently being completed in rl_line_buffer. */ -char ** -programmable_completions (cmd, word, start, end, foundp) - const char *cmd; - const char *word; - int start, end, *foundp; -{ - COMPSPEC *cs, *lastcs; - STRINGLIST *ret; - char **rmatches, *t; - int found, retry, count; - - lastcs = 0; - found = count = 0; - - do - { - retry = 0; - - /* We look at the basename of CMD if the full command does not have - an associated COMPSPEC. */ - ret = gen_progcomp_completions (cmd, cmd, word, start, end, &found, &retry, &lastcs); - if (found == 0) - { - t = strrchr (cmd, '/'); - if (t && *(++t)) - ret = gen_progcomp_completions (t, cmd, word, start, end, &found, &retry, &lastcs); - } - - if (found == 0) - ret = gen_progcomp_completions (DEFAULTCMD, cmd, word, start, end, &found, &retry, &lastcs); - - count++; - - if (count > 32) - { - internal_warning ("programmable_completion: %s: possible retry loop", cmd); - break; - } - } - while (retry); - - if (ret) - { - rmatches = ret->list; - free (ret); - } - else - rmatches = (char **)NULL; - - if (foundp) - *foundp = found; - - if (lastcs) /* XXX - should be while? */ - compspec_dispose (lastcs); - - return (rmatches); -} - -#endif /* PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION */ diff --git a/sig.c~ b/sig.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index ee78fa33f..000000000 --- a/sig.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,723 +0,0 @@ -/* sig.c - interface for shell signal handlers and signal initialization. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1994-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#include "bashtypes.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# ifdef _MINIX -# include -# endif -# include -#endif - -#include -#include - -#include "bashintl.h" - -#include "shell.h" -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) -#include "jobs.h" -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL */ -#include "siglist.h" -#include "sig.h" -#include "trap.h" - -#include "builtins/common.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) -# include "bashline.h" -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) -# include "bashhist.h" -#endif - -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern int last_command_exit_signal; -extern int return_catch_flag; -extern int loop_level, continuing, breaking, funcnest; -extern int executing_list; -extern int comsub_ignore_return; -extern int parse_and_execute_level, shell_initialized; -#if defined (HISTORY) -extern int history_lines_this_session; -#endif -extern int no_line_editing; - -extern void initialize_siglist (); - -/* Non-zero after SIGINT. */ -volatile sig_atomic_t interrupt_state = 0; - -/* Non-zero after SIGWINCH */ -volatile sig_atomic_t sigwinch_received = 0; - -/* Non-zero after SIGTERM */ -volatile sig_atomic_t sigterm_received = 0; - -/* Set to the value of any terminating signal received. */ -volatile sig_atomic_t terminating_signal = 0; - -/* The environment at the top-level R-E loop. We use this in - the case of error return. */ -procenv_t top_level; - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) || defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) -/* The signal masks that this shell runs with. */ -sigset_t top_level_mask; -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL */ - -/* When non-zero, we throw_to_top_level (). */ -int interrupt_immediately = 0; - -/* When non-zero, we call the terminating signal handler immediately. */ -int terminate_immediately = 0; - -#if defined (SIGWINCH) -static SigHandler *old_winch = (SigHandler *)SIG_DFL; -#endif - -static void initialize_shell_signals __P((void)); - -void -initialize_signals (reinit) - int reinit; -{ - initialize_shell_signals (); - initialize_job_signals (); -#if !defined (HAVE_SYS_SIGLIST) && !defined (HAVE_UNDER_SYS_SIGLIST) && !defined (HAVE_STRSIGNAL) - if (reinit == 0) - initialize_siglist (); -#endif /* !HAVE_SYS_SIGLIST && !HAVE_UNDER_SYS_SIGLIST && !HAVE_STRSIGNAL */ -} - -/* A structure describing a signal that terminates the shell if not - caught. The orig_handler member is present so children can reset - these signals back to their original handlers. */ -struct termsig { - int signum; - SigHandler *orig_handler; - int orig_flags; -}; - -#define NULL_HANDLER (SigHandler *)SIG_DFL - -/* The list of signals that would terminate the shell if not caught. - We catch them, but just so that we can write the history file, - and so forth. */ -static struct termsig terminating_signals[] = { -#ifdef SIGHUP -{ SIGHUP, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGINT -{ SIGINT, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGILL -{ SIGILL, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGTRAP -{ SIGTRAP, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGIOT -{ SIGIOT, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGDANGER -{ SIGDANGER, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGEMT -{ SIGEMT, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGFPE -{ SIGFPE, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGBUS -{ SIGBUS, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGSEGV -{ SIGSEGV, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGSYS -{ SIGSYS, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGPIPE -{ SIGPIPE, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGALRM -{ SIGALRM, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGTERM -{ SIGTERM, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGXCPU -{ SIGXCPU, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGXFSZ -{ SIGXFSZ, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGVTALRM -{ SIGVTALRM, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#if 0 -#ifdef SIGPROF -{ SIGPROF, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif -#endif - -#ifdef SIGLOST -{ SIGLOST, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGUSR1 -{ SIGUSR1, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif - -#ifdef SIGUSR2 -{ SIGUSR2, NULL_HANDLER, 0 }, -#endif -}; - -#define TERMSIGS_LENGTH (sizeof (terminating_signals) / sizeof (struct termsig)) - -#define XSIG(x) (terminating_signals[x].signum) -#define XHANDLER(x) (terminating_signals[x].orig_handler) -#define XSAFLAGS(x) (terminating_signals[x].orig_flags) - -static int termsigs_initialized = 0; - -/* Initialize signals that will terminate the shell to do some - unwind protection. For non-interactive shells, we only call - this when a trap is defined for EXIT (0) or when trap is run - to display signal dispositions. */ -void -initialize_terminating_signals () -{ - register int i; -#if defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - struct sigaction act, oact; -#endif - - if (termsigs_initialized) - return; - - /* The following code is to avoid an expensive call to - set_signal_handler () for each terminating_signals. Fortunately, - this is possible in Posix. Unfortunately, we have to call signal () - on non-Posix systems for each signal in terminating_signals. */ -#if defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - act.sa_handler = termsig_sighandler; - act.sa_flags = 0; - sigemptyset (&act.sa_mask); - sigemptyset (&oact.sa_mask); - for (i = 0; i < TERMSIGS_LENGTH; i++) - sigaddset (&act.sa_mask, XSIG (i)); - for (i = 0; i < TERMSIGS_LENGTH; i++) - { - /* If we've already trapped it, don't do anything. */ - if (signal_is_trapped (XSIG (i))) - continue; - - sigaction (XSIG (i), &act, &oact); - XHANDLER(i) = oact.sa_handler; - XSAFLAGS(i) = oact.sa_flags; - /* Don't do anything with signals that are ignored at shell entry - if the shell is not interactive. */ - /* XXX - should we do this for interactive shells, too? */ - if (interactive_shell == 0 && XHANDLER (i) == SIG_IGN) - { - sigaction (XSIG (i), &oact, &act); - set_signal_ignored (XSIG (i)); - } -#if defined (SIGPROF) && !defined (_MINIX) - if (XSIG (i) == SIGPROF && XHANDLER (i) != SIG_DFL && XHANDLER (i) != SIG_IGN) - sigaction (XSIG (i), &oact, (struct sigaction *)NULL); -#endif /* SIGPROF && !_MINIX */ - } - -#else /* !HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ - - for (i = 0; i < TERMSIGS_LENGTH; i++) - { - /* If we've already trapped it, don't do anything. */ - if (signal_is_trapped (XSIG (i))) - continue; - - XHANDLER(i) = signal (XSIG (i), termsig_sighandler); - XSAFLAGS(i) = 0; - /* Don't do anything with signals that are ignored at shell entry - if the shell is not interactive. */ - /* XXX - should we do this for interactive shells, too? */ - if (interactive_shell == 0 && XHANDLER (i) == SIG_IGN) - { - signal (XSIG (i), SIG_IGN); - set_signal_ignored (XSIG (i)); - } -#ifdef SIGPROF - if (XSIG (i) == SIGPROF && XHANDLER (i) != SIG_DFL && XHANDLER (i) != SIG_IGN) - signal (XSIG (i), XHANDLER (i)); -#endif - } - -#endif /* !HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ - - termsigs_initialized = 1; -} - -static void -initialize_shell_signals () -{ - if (interactive) - initialize_terminating_signals (); - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) || defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - /* All shells use the signal mask they inherit, and pass it along - to child processes. Children will never block SIGCHLD, though. */ - sigemptyset (&top_level_mask); - sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, (sigset_t *)NULL, &top_level_mask); -# if defined (SIGCHLD) - sigdelset (&top_level_mask, SIGCHLD); -# endif -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL || HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ - - /* And, some signals that are specifically ignored by the shell. */ - set_signal_handler (SIGQUIT, SIG_IGN); - - if (interactive) - { - set_signal_handler (SIGINT, sigint_sighandler); - get_original_signal (SIGTERM); - if (signal_is_hard_ignored (SIGTERM) == 0) - set_signal_handler (SIGTERM, sigterm_sighandler); - set_sigwinch_handler (); - } -} - -void -reset_terminating_signals () -{ - register int i; -#if defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - struct sigaction act; -#endif - - if (termsigs_initialized == 0) - return; - -#if defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - act.sa_flags = 0; - sigemptyset (&act.sa_mask); - for (i = 0; i < TERMSIGS_LENGTH; i++) - { - /* Skip a signal if it's trapped or handled specially, because the - trap code will restore the correct value. */ - if (signal_is_trapped (XSIG (i)) || signal_is_special (XSIG (i))) - continue; - - act.sa_handler = XHANDLER (i); - act.sa_flags = XSAFLAGS (i); - sigaction (XSIG (i), &act, (struct sigaction *) NULL); - } -#else /* !HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ - for (i = 0; i < TERMSIGS_LENGTH; i++) - { - if (signal_is_trapped (XSIG (i)) || signal_is_special (XSIG (i))) - continue; - - signal (XSIG (i), XHANDLER (i)); - } -#endif /* !HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ - - termsigs_initialized = 0; -} -#undef XSIG -#undef XHANDLER - -/* Run some of the cleanups that should be performed when we run - jump_to_top_level from a builtin command context. XXX - might want to - also call reset_parser here. */ -void -top_level_cleanup () -{ - /* Clean up string parser environment. */ - while (parse_and_execute_level) - parse_and_execute_cleanup (); - -#if defined (PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION) - unlink_fifo_list (); -#endif /* PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION */ - - run_unwind_protects (); - loop_level = continuing = breaking = funcnest = 0; - executing_list = comsub_ignore_return = return_catch_flag = 0; -} - -/* What to do when we've been interrupted, and it is safe to handle it. */ -void -throw_to_top_level () -{ - int print_newline = 0; - - if (interrupt_state) - { - if (last_command_exit_value < 128) - last_command_exit_value = 128 + SIGINT; - print_newline = 1; - DELINTERRUPT; - } - - if (interrupt_state) - return; - - last_command_exit_signal = (last_command_exit_value > 128) ? - (last_command_exit_value - 128) : 0; - last_command_exit_value |= 128; - - /* Run any traps set on SIGINT. */ - run_interrupt_trap (); - - /* Clean up string parser environment. */ - while (parse_and_execute_level) - parse_and_execute_cleanup (); - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - give_terminal_to (shell_pgrp, 0); -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL */ - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) || defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - /* This needs to stay because jobs.c:make_child() uses it without resetting - the signal mask. */ - sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, &top_level_mask, (sigset_t *)NULL); -#endif - - reset_parser (); - -#if defined (READLINE) - if (interactive) - bashline_reset (); -#endif /* READLINE */ - -#if defined (PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION) - unlink_fifo_list (); -#endif /* PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION */ - - run_unwind_protects (); - loop_level = continuing = breaking = funcnest = 0; - executing_list = comsub_ignore_return = return_catch_flag = 0; - - if (interactive && print_newline) - { - fflush (stdout); - fprintf (stderr, "\n"); - fflush (stderr); - } - - /* An interrupted `wait' command in a script does not exit the script. */ - if (interactive || (interactive_shell && !shell_initialized) || - (print_newline && signal_is_trapped (SIGINT))) - jump_to_top_level (DISCARD); - else - jump_to_top_level (EXITPROG); -} - -/* This is just here to isolate the longjmp calls. */ -void -jump_to_top_level (value) - int value; -{ - longjmp (top_level, value); -} - -sighandler -termsig_sighandler (sig) - int sig; -{ - /* If we get called twice with the same signal before handling it, - terminate right away. */ - if ( -#ifdef SIGHUP - sig != SIGHUP && -#endif -#ifdef SIGINT - sig != SIGINT && -#endif -#ifdef SIGDANGER - sig != SIGDANGER && -#endif -#ifdef SIGPIPE - sig != SIGPIPE && -#endif -#ifdef SIGALRM - sig != SIGALRM && -#endif -#ifdef SIGTERM - sig != SIGTERM && -#endif -#ifdef SIGXCPU - sig != SIGXCPU && -#endif -#ifdef SIGXFSZ - sig != SIGXFSZ && -#endif -#ifdef SIGVTALRM - sig != SIGVTALRM && -#endif -#ifdef SIGLOST - sig != SIGLOST && -#endif -#ifdef SIGUSR1 - sig != SIGUSR1 && -#endif -#ifdef SIGUSR2 - sig != SIGUSR2 && -#endif - sig == terminating_signal) - terminate_immediately = 1; - - terminating_signal = sig; - - /* XXX - should this also trigger when interrupt_immediately is set? */ - if (terminate_immediately) - { -#if defined (HISTORY) - /* XXX - will inhibit history file being written */ -# if defined (READLINE) - if (interactive_shell == 0 || interactive == 0 || (sig != SIGHUP && sig != SIGTERM) || no_line_editing || (RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_READCMD) == 0)) -# endif - history_lines_this_session = 0; -#endif - terminate_immediately = 0; - termsig_handler (sig); - } - -#if defined (READLINE) - /* Set the event hook so readline will call it after the signal handlers - finish executing, so if this interrupted character input we can get - quick response. */ - if (interactive_shell && interactive && no_line_editing == 0) - bashline_set_event_hook (); -#endif - - SIGRETURN (0); -} - -void -termsig_handler (sig) - int sig; -{ - static int handling_termsig = 0; - - /* Simple semaphore to keep this function from being executed multiple - times. Since we no longer are running as a signal handler, we don't - block multiple occurrences of the terminating signals while running. */ - if (handling_termsig) - return; - handling_termsig = 1; - terminating_signal = 0; /* keep macro from re-testing true. */ - - /* I don't believe this condition ever tests true. */ - if (sig == SIGINT && signal_is_trapped (SIGINT)) - run_interrupt_trap (); - -#if defined (HISTORY) - /* If we don't do something like this, the history will not be saved when - an interactive shell is running in a terminal window that gets closed - with the `close' button. We can't test for RL_STATE_READCMD because - readline no longer handles SIGTERM synchronously. */ - if (interactive_shell && interactive && (sig == SIGHUP || sig == SIGTERM) && remember_on_history) - maybe_save_shell_history (); -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - if (sig == SIGHUP && (interactive || (subshell_environment & (SUBSHELL_COMSUB|SUBSHELL_PROCSUB)))) - hangup_all_jobs (); - end_job_control (); -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL */ - -#if defined (PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION) - unlink_fifo_list (); -#endif /* PROCESS_SUBSTITUTION */ - - /* Reset execution context */ - loop_level = continuing = breaking = funcnest = 0; - executing_list = comsub_ignore_return = return_catch_flag = 0; - - run_exit_trap (); /* XXX - run exit trap possibly in signal context? */ - set_signal_handler (sig, SIG_DFL); - kill (getpid (), sig); -} - -/* What we really do when SIGINT occurs. */ -sighandler -sigint_sighandler (sig) - int sig; -{ -#if defined (MUST_REINSTALL_SIGHANDLERS) - signal (sig, sigint_sighandler); -#endif - - /* interrupt_state needs to be set for the stack of interrupts to work - right. Should it be set unconditionally? */ - if (interrupt_state == 0) - ADDINTERRUPT; - - if (interrupt_immediately) - { - interrupt_immediately = 0; - last_command_exit_value = 128 + sig; - throw_to_top_level (); - } -#if defined (READLINE) - /* Set the event hook so readline will call it after the signal handlers - finish executing, so if this interrupted character input we can get - quick response. */ - else if (RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_SIGHANDLER)) - bashline_set_event_hook (); -#endif - - SIGRETURN (0); -} - -#if defined (SIGWINCH) -sighandler -sigwinch_sighandler (sig) - int sig; -{ -#if defined (MUST_REINSTALL_SIGHANDLERS) - set_signal_handler (SIGWINCH, sigwinch_sighandler); -#endif /* MUST_REINSTALL_SIGHANDLERS */ - sigwinch_received = 1; - SIGRETURN (0); -} -#endif /* SIGWINCH */ - -void -set_sigwinch_handler () -{ -#if defined (SIGWINCH) - old_winch = set_signal_handler (SIGWINCH, sigwinch_sighandler); -#endif -} - -void -unset_sigwinch_handler () -{ -#if defined (SIGWINCH) - set_signal_handler (SIGWINCH, old_winch); -#endif -} - -sighandler -sigterm_sighandler (sig) - int sig; -{ - sigterm_received = 1; /* XXX - counter? */ - SIGRETURN (0); -} - -/* Signal functions used by the rest of the code. */ -#if !defined (HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS) - -/* Perform OPERATION on NEWSET, perhaps leaving information in OLDSET. */ -sigprocmask (operation, newset, oldset) - int operation, *newset, *oldset; -{ - int old, new; - - if (newset) - new = *newset; - else - new = 0; - - switch (operation) - { - case SIG_BLOCK: - old = sigblock (new); - break; - - case SIG_SETMASK: - old = sigsetmask (new); - break; - - default: - internal_error (_("sigprocmask: %d: invalid operation"), operation); - } - - if (oldset) - *oldset = old; -} - -#else - -#if !defined (SA_INTERRUPT) -# define SA_INTERRUPT 0 -#endif - -#if !defined (SA_RESTART) -# define SA_RESTART 0 -#endif - -SigHandler * -set_signal_handler (sig, handler) - int sig; - SigHandler *handler; -{ - struct sigaction act, oact; - - act.sa_handler = handler; - act.sa_flags = 0; - - /* XXX - bash-4.2 */ - /* We don't want a child death to interrupt interruptible system calls, even - if we take the time to reap children */ -#if defined (SIGCHLD) - if (sig == SIGCHLD) - act.sa_flags |= SA_RESTART; /* XXX */ -#endif - /* If we're installing a SIGTERM handler for interactive shells, we want - it to be as close to SIG_IGN as possible. */ - if (sig == SIGTERM && handler == sigterm_sighandler) - act.sa_flags |= SA_RESTART; /* XXX */ - - sigemptyset (&act.sa_mask); - sigemptyset (&oact.sa_mask); - sigaction (sig, &act, &oact); - return (oact.sa_handler); -} -#endif /* HAVE_POSIX_SIGNALS */ diff --git a/tests/RUN-ONE-TEST~ b/tests/RUN-ONE-TEST~ deleted file mode 100755 index 3efcf32d6..000000000 --- a/tests/RUN-ONE-TEST~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,9 +0,0 @@ -BUILD_DIR=/usr/local/build/chet/bash/bash-current -THIS_SH=$BUILD_DIR/bash -PATH=$PATH:$BUILD_DIR - -export THIS_SH PATH - -rm -f /tmp/xx - -/bin/sh "$@" diff --git a/tests/misc/regress/log.orig b/tests/misc/regress/log.orig deleted file mode 100644 index c1f1e1991..000000000 --- a/tests/misc/regress/log.orig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,50 +0,0 @@ -:; ./shx - -sh: -<&$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... -:; diff --git a/tests/misc/regress/shx.orig b/tests/misc/regress/shx.orig deleted file mode 100644 index 4b3bf2b82..000000000 --- a/tests/misc/regress/shx.orig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,10 +0,0 @@ -#! /bin/sh -for cmd in sh bash ash ksh zsh -do - echo - echo $cmd: - for demo in shx? - do - $cmd $demo - done -done diff --git a/trap.c~ b/trap.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index 5b4c154f4..000000000 --- a/trap.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1223 +0,0 @@ -/* trap.c -- Not the trap command, but useful functions for manipulating - those objects. The trap command is in builtins/trap.def. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "bashansi.h" - -#include -#include - -#include "bashintl.h" - -#include - -#include "trap.h" - -#include "shell.h" -#include "flags.h" -#include "input.h" /* for save_token_state, restore_token_state */ -#include "jobs.h" -#include "signames.h" -#include "builtins.h" -#include "builtins/common.h" -#include "builtins/builtext.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) -# include -# include "bashline.h" -#endif - -#ifndef errno -extern int errno; -#endif - -/* Flags which describe the current handling state of a signal. */ -#define SIG_INHERITED 0x0 /* Value inherited from parent. */ -#define SIG_TRAPPED 0x1 /* Currently trapped. */ -#define SIG_HARD_IGNORE 0x2 /* Signal was ignored on shell entry. */ -#define SIG_SPECIAL 0x4 /* Treat this signal specially. */ -#define SIG_NO_TRAP 0x8 /* Signal cannot be trapped. */ -#define SIG_INPROGRESS 0x10 /* Signal handler currently executing. */ -#define SIG_CHANGED 0x20 /* Trap value changed in trap handler. */ -#define SIG_IGNORED 0x40 /* The signal is currently being ignored. */ - -#define SPECIAL_TRAP(s) ((s) == EXIT_TRAP || (s) == DEBUG_TRAP || (s) == ERROR_TRAP || (s) == RETURN_TRAP) - -/* An array of such flags, one for each signal, describing what the - shell will do with a signal. DEBUG_TRAP == NSIG; some code below - assumes this. */ -static int sigmodes[BASH_NSIG]; - -static void free_trap_command __P((int)); -static void change_signal __P((int, char *)); - -static int _run_trap_internal __P((int, char *)); - -static void free_trap_string __P((int)); -static void reset_signal __P((int)); -static void restore_signal __P((int)); -static void reset_or_restore_signal_handlers __P((sh_resetsig_func_t *)); - -/* Variables used here but defined in other files. */ -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern int line_number; - -extern int sigalrm_seen; -extern procenv_t alrmbuf; - -extern char *this_command_name; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *this_shell_builtin; -extern procenv_t wait_intr_buf; -extern int return_catch_flag, return_catch_value; -extern int subshell_level; -extern WORD_LIST *subst_assign_varlist; - -/* The list of things to do originally, before we started trapping. */ -SigHandler *original_signals[NSIG]; - -/* For each signal, a slot for a string, which is a command to be - executed when that signal is recieved. The slot can also contain - DEFAULT_SIG, which means do whatever you were going to do before - you were so rudely interrupted, or IGNORE_SIG, which says ignore - this signal. */ -char *trap_list[BASH_NSIG]; - -/* A bitmap of signals received for which we have trap handlers. */ -int pending_traps[NSIG]; - -/* Set to the number of the signal we're running the trap for + 1. - Used in execute_cmd.c and builtins/common.c to clean up when - parse_and_execute does not return normally after executing the - trap command (e.g., when `return' is executed in the trap command). */ -int running_trap; - -/* Set to last_command_exit_value before running a trap. */ -int trap_saved_exit_value; - -/* The (trapped) signal received while executing in the `wait' builtin */ -int wait_signal_received; - -int trapped_signal_received; - -#define GETORIGSIG(sig) \ - do { \ - original_signals[sig] = (SigHandler *)set_signal_handler (sig, SIG_DFL); \ - set_signal_handler (sig, original_signals[sig]); \ - if (original_signals[sig] == SIG_IGN) \ - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_HARD_IGNORE; \ - } while (0) - -#define SETORIGSIG(sig,handler) \ - do { \ - original_signals[sig] = handler; \ - if (original_signals[sig] == SIG_IGN) \ - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_HARD_IGNORE; \ - } while (0) - -#define GET_ORIGINAL_SIGNAL(sig) \ - if (sig && sig < NSIG && original_signals[sig] == IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) \ - GETORIGSIG(sig) - -void -initialize_traps () -{ - register int i; - - initialize_signames(); - - trap_list[EXIT_TRAP] = trap_list[DEBUG_TRAP] = trap_list[ERROR_TRAP] = trap_list[RETURN_TRAP] = (char *)NULL; - sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] = sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] = sigmodes[ERROR_TRAP] = sigmodes[RETURN_TRAP] = SIG_INHERITED; - original_signals[EXIT_TRAP] = IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER; - - for (i = 1; i < NSIG; i++) - { - pending_traps[i] = 0; - trap_list[i] = (char *)DEFAULT_SIG; - sigmodes[i] = SIG_INHERITED; /* XXX - only set, not used */ - original_signals[i] = IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER; - } - - /* Show which signals are treated specially by the shell. */ -#if defined (SIGCHLD) - GETORIGSIG (SIGCHLD); - sigmodes[SIGCHLD] |= (SIG_SPECIAL | SIG_NO_TRAP); -#endif /* SIGCHLD */ - - GETORIGSIG (SIGINT); - sigmodes[SIGINT] |= SIG_SPECIAL; - -#if defined (__BEOS__) - /* BeOS sets SIGINT to SIG_IGN! */ - original_signals[SIGINT] = SIG_DFL; - sigmodes[SIGINT] &= ~SIG_HARD_IGNORE; -#endif - - GETORIGSIG (SIGQUIT); - sigmodes[SIGQUIT] |= SIG_SPECIAL; - - if (interactive) - { - GETORIGSIG (SIGTERM); - sigmodes[SIGTERM] |= SIG_SPECIAL; - } -} - -#ifdef DEBUG -/* Return a printable representation of the trap handler for SIG. */ -static char * -trap_handler_string (sig) - int sig; -{ - if (trap_list[sig] == (char *)DEFAULT_SIG) - return "DEFAULT_SIG"; - else if (trap_list[sig] == (char *)IGNORE_SIG) - return "IGNORE_SIG"; - else if (trap_list[sig] == (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - return "IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER"; - else if (trap_list[sig]) - return trap_list[sig]; - else - return "NULL"; -} -#endif - -/* Return the print name of this signal. */ -char * -signal_name (sig) - int sig; -{ - char *ret; - - /* on cygwin32, signal_names[sig] could be null */ - ret = (sig >= BASH_NSIG || sig < 0 || signal_names[sig] == NULL) - ? _("invalid signal number") - : signal_names[sig]; - - return ret; -} - -/* Turn a string into a signal number, or a number into - a signal number. If STRING is "2", "SIGINT", or "INT", - then (int)2 is returned. Return NO_SIG if STRING doesn't - contain a valid signal descriptor. */ -int -decode_signal (string, flags) - char *string; - int flags; -{ - intmax_t sig; - char *name; - - if (legal_number (string, &sig)) - return ((sig >= 0 && sig < NSIG) ? (int)sig : NO_SIG); - - /* A leading `SIG' may be omitted. */ - for (sig = 0; sig < BASH_NSIG; sig++) - { - name = signal_names[sig]; - if (name == 0 || name[0] == '\0') - continue; - - /* Check name without the SIG prefix first case sensitivly or - insensitively depending on whether flags includes DSIG_NOCASE */ - if (STREQN (name, "SIG", 3)) - { - name += 3; - - if ((flags & DSIG_NOCASE) && strcasecmp (string, name) == 0) - return ((int)sig); - else if ((flags & DSIG_NOCASE) == 0 && strcmp (string, name) == 0) - return ((int)sig); - /* If we can't use the `SIG' prefix to match, punt on this - name now. */ - else if ((flags & DSIG_SIGPREFIX) == 0) - continue; - } - - /* Check name with SIG prefix case sensitively or insensitively - depending on whether flags includes DSIG_NOCASE */ - name = signal_names[sig]; - if ((flags & DSIG_NOCASE) && strcasecmp (string, name) == 0) - return ((int)sig); - else if ((flags & DSIG_NOCASE) == 0 && strcmp (string, name) == 0) - return ((int)sig); - } - - return (NO_SIG); -} - -/* Non-zero when we catch a trapped signal. */ -static int catch_flag; - -void -run_pending_traps () -{ - register int sig; - int old_exit_value; - WORD_LIST *save_subst_varlist; - sh_parser_state_t pstate; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ARRAY *ps; -#endif - - if (catch_flag == 0) /* simple optimization */ - return; - - if (running_trap > 0) - return; /* no recursive trap invocations */ - - catch_flag = trapped_signal_received = 0; - - /* Preserve $? when running trap. */ - old_exit_value = last_command_exit_value; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ps = save_pipestatus_array (); -#endif - - for (sig = 1; sig < NSIG; sig++) - { - /* XXX this could be made into a counter by using - while (pending_traps[sig]--) instead of the if statement. */ - if (pending_traps[sig]) - { - sigset_t set, oset; - - BLOCK_SIGNAL (sig, set, oset); - - running_trap = sig + 1; - - if (sig == SIGINT) - { - run_interrupt_trap (); - CLRINTERRUPT; - } -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) && defined (SIGCHLD) - else if (sig == SIGCHLD && - trap_list[SIGCHLD] != (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER && - (sigmodes[SIGCHLD] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0) - { - sigmodes[SIGCHLD] |= SIG_INPROGRESS; - run_sigchld_trap (pending_traps[sig]); /* use as counter */ - sigmodes[SIGCHLD] &= ~SIG_INPROGRESS; - } - else if (sig == SIGCHLD && - trap_list[SIGCHLD] == (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER && - (sigmodes[SIGCHLD] & SIG_INPROGRESS) != 0) - { - /* This can happen when run_pending_traps is called while - running a SIGCHLD trap handler. */ - running_trap = 0; - UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (oset); - continue; /* XXX */ - } -#endif - else if (trap_list[sig] == (char *)DEFAULT_SIG || - trap_list[sig] == (char *)IGNORE_SIG || - trap_list[sig] == (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - { - /* This is possible due to a race condition. Say a bash - process has SIGTERM trapped. A subshell is spawned - using { list; } & and the parent does something and kills - the subshell with SIGTERM. It's possible for the subshell - to set pending_traps[SIGTERM] to 1 before the code in - execute_cmd.c eventually calls restore_original_signals - to reset the SIGTERM signal handler in the subshell. The - next time run_pending_traps is called, pending_traps[SIGTERM] - will be 1, but the trap handler in trap_list[SIGTERM] will - be invalid (probably DEFAULT_SIG, but it could be IGNORE_SIG). - Unless we catch this, the subshell will dump core when - trap_list[SIGTERM] == DEFAULT_SIG, because DEFAULT_SIG is - usually 0x0. */ - internal_warning (_("run_pending_traps: bad value in trap_list[%d]: %p"), - sig, trap_list[sig]); - if (trap_list[sig] == (char *)DEFAULT_SIG) - { - internal_warning (_("run_pending_traps: signal handler is SIG_DFL, resending %d (%s) to myself"), sig, signal_name (sig)); - kill (getpid (), sig); - } - } - else - { - /* XXX - should we use save_parser_state/restore_parser_state? */ - save_parser_state (&pstate); - save_subst_varlist = subst_assign_varlist; - subst_assign_varlist = 0; - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - save_pipeline (1); /* XXX only provides one save level */ -#endif - evalstring (savestring (trap_list[sig]), "trap", SEVAL_NONINT|SEVAL_NOHIST|SEVAL_RESETLINE); -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - restore_pipeline (1); -#endif - - restore_parser_state (&pstate); - free (token_state); - - subst_assign_varlist = save_subst_varlist; - } - - pending_traps[sig] = 0; - running_trap = 0; - - UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (oset); - } - } - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - restore_pipestatus_array (ps); -#endif - last_command_exit_value = old_exit_value; -} - -sighandler -trap_handler (sig) - int sig; -{ - int oerrno; - - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) == 0) - { -#if defined (DEBUG) - internal_warning ("trap_handler: signal %d: signal not trapped", sig); -#endif - SIGRETURN (0); - } - - if ((sig >= NSIG) || - (trap_list[sig] == (char *)DEFAULT_SIG) || - (trap_list[sig] == (char *)IGNORE_SIG)) - programming_error (_("trap_handler: bad signal %d"), sig); - else - { - oerrno = errno; -#if defined (MUST_REINSTALL_SIGHANDLERS) -# if defined (JOB_CONTROL) && defined (SIGCHLD) - if (sig != SIGCHLD) -# endif /* JOB_CONTROL && SIGCHLD */ - set_signal_handler (sig, trap_handler); -#endif /* MUST_REINSTALL_SIGHANDLERS */ - - catch_flag = 1; - pending_traps[sig]++; - - trapped_signal_received = sig; - - if (this_shell_builtin && (this_shell_builtin == wait_builtin)) - { - wait_signal_received = sig; - if (interrupt_immediately) - longjmp (wait_intr_buf, 1); - } - -#if defined (READLINE) - /* Set the event hook so readline will call it after the signal handlers - finish executing, so if this interrupted character input we can get - quick response. */ - if (RL_ISSTATE (RL_STATE_SIGHANDLER) && interrupt_immediately == 0) - bashline_set_event_hook (); -#endif - - if (interrupt_immediately) - run_pending_traps (); - - errno = oerrno; - } - - SIGRETURN (0); -} - -int -first_pending_trap () -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 1; i < NSIG; i++) - if (pending_traps[i]) - return i; - return -1; -} - -int -any_signals_trapped () -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 1; i < NSIG; i++) - if (sigmodes[i] & SIG_TRAPPED) - return i; - return -1; -} - -void -check_signals () -{ - CHECK_ALRM; /* set by the read builtin */ - QUIT; -} - -/* Convenience functions the rest of the shell can use */ -void -check_signals_and_traps () -{ - check_signals (); - - run_pending_traps (); -} - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) && defined (SIGCHLD) - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -/* Make COMMAND_STRING be executed when SIGCHLD is caught. */ -void -set_sigchld_trap (command_string) - char *command_string; -{ - set_signal (SIGCHLD, command_string); -} -#endif - -/* Make COMMAND_STRING be executed when SIGCHLD is caught iff SIGCHLD - is not already trapped. IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER is used as a sentinel - to make sure that a SIGCHLD trap handler run via run_sigchld_trap can - reset the disposition to the default and not have the original signal - accidentally restored, undoing the user's command. */ -void -maybe_set_sigchld_trap (command_string) - char *command_string; -{ - if ((sigmodes[SIGCHLD] & SIG_TRAPPED) == 0 && trap_list[SIGCHLD] == (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - set_signal (SIGCHLD, command_string); -} - -/* Temporarily set the SIGCHLD trap string to IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER. Used - as a sentinel in run_sigchld_trap and maybe_set_sigchld_trap to see whether - or not a SIGCHLD trap handler reset SIGCHLD disposition to the default. */ -void -set_impossible_sigchld_trap () -{ - restore_default_signal (SIGCHLD); - change_signal (SIGCHLD, (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER); - sigmodes[SIGCHLD] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; /* maybe_set_sigchld_trap checks this */ -} - -/* Act as if we received SIGCHLD NCHILD times and increment - pending_traps[SIGCHLD] by that amount. This allows us to still run the - SIGCHLD trap once for each exited child. */ -void -queue_sigchld_trap (nchild) - int nchild; -{ - if (nchild > 0) - { - catch_flag = 1; - pending_traps[SIGCHLD] += nchild; - trapped_signal_received = SIGCHLD; - } -} -#endif /* JOB_CONTROL && SIGCHLD */ - -void -set_debug_trap (command) - char *command; -{ - set_signal (DEBUG_TRAP, command); -} - -void -set_error_trap (command) - char *command; -{ - set_signal (ERROR_TRAP, command); -} - -void -set_return_trap (command) - char *command; -{ - set_signal (RETURN_TRAP, command); -} - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -void -set_sigint_trap (command) - char *command; -{ - set_signal (SIGINT, command); -} -#endif - -/* Reset the SIGINT handler so that subshells that are doing `shellsy' - things, like waiting for command substitution or executing commands - in explicit subshells ( ( cmd ) ), can catch interrupts properly. */ -SigHandler * -set_sigint_handler () -{ - if (sigmodes[SIGINT] & SIG_HARD_IGNORE) - return ((SigHandler *)SIG_IGN); - - else if (sigmodes[SIGINT] & SIG_IGNORED) - return ((SigHandler *)set_signal_handler (SIGINT, SIG_IGN)); /* XXX */ - - else if (sigmodes[SIGINT] & SIG_TRAPPED) - return ((SigHandler *)set_signal_handler (SIGINT, trap_handler)); - - /* The signal is not trapped, so set the handler to the shell's special - interrupt handler. */ - else if (interactive) /* XXX - was interactive_shell */ - return (set_signal_handler (SIGINT, sigint_sighandler)); - else - return (set_signal_handler (SIGINT, termsig_sighandler)); -} - -/* Return the correct handler for signal SIG according to the values in - sigmodes[SIG]. */ -SigHandler * -trap_to_sighandler (sig) - int sig; -{ - if (sigmodes[sig] & (SIG_IGNORED|SIG_HARD_IGNORE)) - return (SIG_IGN); - else if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) - return (trap_handler); - else - return (SIG_DFL); -} - -/* Set SIG to call STRING as a command. */ -void -set_signal (sig, string) - int sig; - char *string; -{ - sigset_t set, oset; - - if (SPECIAL_TRAP (sig)) - { - change_signal (sig, savestring (string)); - if (sig == EXIT_TRAP && interactive == 0) - initialize_terminating_signals (); - return; - } - - /* A signal ignored on entry to the shell cannot be trapped or reset, but - no error is reported when attempting to do so. -- Posix.2 */ - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_HARD_IGNORE) - return; - - /* Make sure we have original_signals[sig] if the signal has not yet - been trapped. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) == 0) - { - /* If we aren't sure of the original value, check it. */ - if (original_signals[sig] == IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - GETORIGSIG (sig); - if (original_signals[sig] == SIG_IGN) - return; - } - - /* Only change the system signal handler if SIG_NO_TRAP is not set. - The trap command string is changed in either case. The shell signal - handlers for SIGINT and SIGCHLD run the user specified traps in an - environment in which it is safe to do so. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_NO_TRAP) == 0) - { - BLOCK_SIGNAL (sig, set, oset); - change_signal (sig, savestring (string)); - set_signal_handler (sig, trap_handler); - UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (oset); - } - else - change_signal (sig, savestring (string)); -} - -static void -free_trap_command (sig) - int sig; -{ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) && trap_list[sig] && - (trap_list[sig] != (char *)IGNORE_SIG) && - (trap_list[sig] != (char *)DEFAULT_SIG) && - (trap_list[sig] != (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER)) - free (trap_list[sig]); -} - -/* If SIG has a string assigned to it, get rid of it. Then give it - VALUE. */ -static void -change_signal (sig, value) - int sig; - char *value; -{ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0) - free_trap_command (sig); - trap_list[sig] = value; - - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_TRAPPED; - if (value == (char *)IGNORE_SIG) - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_IGNORED; - else - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_IGNORED; - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS) - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_CHANGED; -} - -void -get_original_signal (sig) - int sig; -{ - /* If we aren't sure the of the original value, then get it. */ - if (sig > 0 && sig < NSIG && original_signals[sig] == (SigHandler *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - GETORIGSIG (sig); -} - -void -get_all_original_signals () -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 1; i < NSIG; i++) - GET_ORIGINAL_SIGNAL (i); -} - -void -set_original_signal (sig, handler) - int sig; - SigHandler *handler; -{ - if (sig > 0 && sig < NSIG && original_signals[sig] == (SigHandler *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) - SETORIGSIG (sig, handler); -} - -/* Restore the default action for SIG; i.e., the action the shell - would have taken before you used the trap command. This is called - from trap_builtin (), which takes care to restore the handlers for - the signals the shell treats specially. */ -void -restore_default_signal (sig) - int sig; -{ - if (SPECIAL_TRAP (sig)) - { - if ((sig != DEBUG_TRAP && sig != ERROR_TRAP && sig != RETURN_TRAP) || - (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0) - free_trap_command (sig); - trap_list[sig] = (char *)NULL; - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS) - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_CHANGED; - return; - } - - GET_ORIGINAL_SIGNAL (sig); - - /* A signal ignored on entry to the shell cannot be trapped or reset, but - no error is reported when attempting to do so. Thanks Posix.2. */ - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_HARD_IGNORE) - return; - - /* If we aren't trapping this signal, don't bother doing anything else. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) == 0) - return; - - /* Only change the signal handler for SIG if it allows it. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_NO_TRAP) == 0) - set_signal_handler (sig, original_signals[sig]); - - /* Change the trap command in either case. */ - change_signal (sig, (char *)DEFAULT_SIG); - - /* Mark the signal as no longer trapped. */ - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; -} - -/* Make this signal be ignored. */ -void -ignore_signal (sig) - int sig; -{ - if (SPECIAL_TRAP (sig) && ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0)) - { - change_signal (sig, (char *)IGNORE_SIG); - return; - } - - GET_ORIGINAL_SIGNAL (sig); - - /* A signal ignored on entry to the shell cannot be trapped or reset. - No error is reported when the user attempts to do so. */ - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_HARD_IGNORE) - return; - - /* If already trapped and ignored, no change necessary. */ - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_IGNORED) - return; - - /* Only change the signal handler for SIG if it allows it. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_NO_TRAP) == 0) - set_signal_handler (sig, SIG_IGN); - - /* Change the trap command in either case. */ - change_signal (sig, (char *)IGNORE_SIG); -} - -/* Handle the calling of "trap 0". The only sticky situation is when - the command to be executed includes an "exit". This is why we have - to provide our own place for top_level to jump to. */ -int -run_exit_trap () -{ - char *trap_command; - int code, function_code, retval; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ARRAY *ps; -#endif - - trap_saved_exit_value = last_command_exit_value; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ps = save_pipestatus_array (); -#endif - function_code = 0; - - /* Run the trap only if signal 0 is trapped and not ignored, and we are not - currently running in the trap handler (call to exit in the list of - commands given to trap 0). */ - if ((sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) && - (sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] & (SIG_IGNORED|SIG_INPROGRESS)) == 0) - { - trap_command = savestring (trap_list[EXIT_TRAP]); - sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; - sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] |= SIG_INPROGRESS; - - retval = trap_saved_exit_value; - running_trap = 1; - - code = setjmp_nosigs (top_level); - - /* If we're in a function, make sure return longjmps come here, too. */ - if (return_catch_flag) - function_code = setjmp_nosigs (return_catch); - - if (code == 0 && function_code == 0) - { - reset_parser (); - parse_and_execute (trap_command, "exit trap", SEVAL_NONINT|SEVAL_NOHIST|SEVAL_RESETLINE); - } - else if (code == ERREXIT) - retval = last_command_exit_value; - else if (code == EXITPROG) - retval = last_command_exit_value; - else if (function_code != 0) - retval = return_catch_value; - else - retval = trap_saved_exit_value; - - running_trap = 0; - return retval; - } - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - restore_pipestatus_array (ps); -#endif - return (trap_saved_exit_value); -} - -void -run_trap_cleanup (sig) - int sig; -{ - sigmodes[sig] &= ~(SIG_INPROGRESS|SIG_CHANGED); -} - -/* Run a trap command for SIG. SIG is one of the signals the shell treats - specially. Returns the exit status of the executed trap command list. */ -static int -_run_trap_internal (sig, tag) - int sig; - char *tag; -{ - char *trap_command, *old_trap; - int trap_exit_value, *token_state; - volatile int save_return_catch_flag, function_code; - int flags; - procenv_t save_return_catch; - WORD_LIST *save_subst_varlist; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ARRAY *ps; -#endif - - trap_exit_value = function_code = 0; - /* Run the trap only if SIG is trapped and not ignored, and we are not - currently executing in the trap handler. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) && ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0) && - (trap_list[sig] != (char *)IMPOSSIBLE_TRAP_HANDLER) && - ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0)) - { - old_trap = trap_list[sig]; - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_INPROGRESS; - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_CHANGED; /* just to be sure */ - trap_command = savestring (old_trap); - - running_trap = sig + 1; - trap_saved_exit_value = last_command_exit_value; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - ps = save_pipestatus_array (); -#endif - - token_state = save_token_state (); - save_subst_varlist = subst_assign_varlist; - subst_assign_varlist = 0; - - /* If we're in a function, make sure return longjmps come here, too. */ - save_return_catch_flag = return_catch_flag; - if (return_catch_flag) - { - COPY_PROCENV (return_catch, save_return_catch); - function_code = setjmp_nosigs (return_catch); - } - - flags = SEVAL_NONINT|SEVAL_NOHIST; - if (sig != DEBUG_TRAP && sig != RETURN_TRAP && sig != ERROR_TRAP) - flags |= SEVAL_RESETLINE; - if (function_code == 0) - parse_and_execute (trap_command, tag, flags); - - restore_token_state (token_state); - free (token_state); - - subst_assign_varlist = save_subst_varlist; - - trap_exit_value = last_command_exit_value; - last_command_exit_value = trap_saved_exit_value; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - restore_pipestatus_array (ps); -#endif - running_trap = 0; - - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_INPROGRESS; - - if (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_CHANGED) - { -#if 0 - /* Special traps like EXIT, DEBUG, RETURN are handled explicitly in - the places where they can be changed using unwind-protects. For - example, look at execute_cmd.c:execute_function(). */ - if (SPECIAL_TRAP (sig) == 0) -#endif - free (old_trap); - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_CHANGED; - } - - if (save_return_catch_flag) - { - return_catch_flag = save_return_catch_flag; - return_catch_value = trap_exit_value; - COPY_PROCENV (save_return_catch, return_catch); - if (function_code) - longjmp (return_catch, 1); - } - } - - return trap_exit_value; -} - -int -run_debug_trap () -{ - int trap_exit_value; - pid_t save_pgrp; - int save_pipe[2]; - - /* XXX - question: should the DEBUG trap inherit the RETURN trap? */ - trap_exit_value = 0; - if ((sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) && ((sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0) && ((sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0)) - { -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - save_pgrp = pipeline_pgrp; - pipeline_pgrp = 0; - save_pipeline (1); -# if defined (PGRP_PIPE) - save_pgrp_pipe (save_pipe, 1); -# endif - stop_making_children (); -#endif - - trap_exit_value = _run_trap_internal (DEBUG_TRAP, "debug trap"); - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - pipeline_pgrp = save_pgrp; - restore_pipeline (1); -# if defined (PGRP_PIPE) - close_pgrp_pipe (); - restore_pgrp_pipe (save_pipe); -# endif - if (pipeline_pgrp > 0) - give_terminal_to (pipeline_pgrp, 1); - notify_and_cleanup (); -#endif - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) - /* If we're in the debugger and the DEBUG trap returns 2 while we're in - a function or sourced script, we force a `return'. */ - if (debugging_mode && trap_exit_value == 2 && return_catch_flag) - { - return_catch_value = trap_exit_value; - longjmp (return_catch, 1); - } -#endif - } - return trap_exit_value; -} - -void -run_error_trap () -{ - if ((sigmodes[ERROR_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) && ((sigmodes[ERROR_TRAP] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0) && (sigmodes[ERROR_TRAP] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0) - _run_trap_internal (ERROR_TRAP, "error trap"); -} - -void -run_return_trap () -{ - int old_exit_value; - -#if 0 - if ((sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) && (sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] & SIG_INPROGRESS)) - return; -#endif - - if ((sigmodes[RETURN_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) && ((sigmodes[RETURN_TRAP] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0) && (sigmodes[RETURN_TRAP] & SIG_INPROGRESS) == 0) - { - old_exit_value = last_command_exit_value; - _run_trap_internal (RETURN_TRAP, "return trap"); - last_command_exit_value = old_exit_value; - } -} - -/* Run a trap set on SIGINT. This is called from throw_to_top_level (), and - declared here to localize the trap functions. */ -void -run_interrupt_trap () -{ - _run_trap_internal (SIGINT, "interrupt trap"); -} - -/* Free all the allocated strings in the list of traps and reset the trap - values to the default. Intended to be called from subshells that want - to complete work done by reset_signal_handlers upon execution of a - subsequent `trap' command that changes a signal's disposition. We need - to make sure that we duplicate the behavior of - reset_or_restore_signal_handlers and not change the disposition of signals - that are set to be ignored. */ -void -free_trap_strings () -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 0; i < BASH_NSIG; i++) - { - if (trap_list[i] != (char *)IGNORE_SIG) - free_trap_string (i); - } - trap_list[DEBUG_TRAP] = trap_list[EXIT_TRAP] = trap_list[ERROR_TRAP] = trap_list[RETURN_TRAP] = (char *)NULL; -} - -/* Free a trap command string associated with SIG without changing signal - disposition. Intended to be called from free_trap_strings() */ -static void -free_trap_string (sig) - int sig; -{ - change_signal (sig, (char *)DEFAULT_SIG); - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; -} - -/* Reset the handler for SIG to the original value but leave the trap string - in place. */ -static void -reset_signal (sig) - int sig; -{ - set_signal_handler (sig, original_signals[sig]); - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; -} - -/* Set the handler signal SIG to the original and free any trap - command associated with it. */ -static void -restore_signal (sig) - int sig; -{ - set_signal_handler (sig, original_signals[sig]); - change_signal (sig, (char *)DEFAULT_SIG); - sigmodes[sig] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; -} - -static void -reset_or_restore_signal_handlers (reset) - sh_resetsig_func_t *reset; -{ - register int i; - - /* Take care of the exit trap first */ - if (sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] & SIG_TRAPPED) - { - sigmodes[EXIT_TRAP] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; - if (reset != reset_signal) - { - free_trap_command (EXIT_TRAP); - trap_list[EXIT_TRAP] = (char *)NULL; - } - } - - for (i = 1; i < NSIG; i++) - { - if (sigmodes[i] & SIG_TRAPPED) - { - if (trap_list[i] == (char *)IGNORE_SIG) - set_signal_handler (i, SIG_IGN); - else - (*reset) (i); - } - else if (sigmodes[i] & SIG_SPECIAL) - (*reset) (i); - } - - /* Command substitution and other child processes don't inherit the - debug, error, or return traps. If we're in the debugger, and the - `functrace' or `errtrace' options have been set, then let command - substitutions inherit them. Let command substitution inherit the - RETURN trap if we're in the debugger and tracing functions. */ - if (function_trace_mode == 0) - { - sigmodes[DEBUG_TRAP] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; - sigmodes[RETURN_TRAP] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; - } - if (error_trace_mode == 0) - sigmodes[ERROR_TRAP] &= ~SIG_TRAPPED; -} - -/* Reset trapped signals to their original values, but don't free the - trap strings. Called by the command substitution code and other places - that create a "subshell environment". */ -void -reset_signal_handlers () -{ - reset_or_restore_signal_handlers (reset_signal); -} - -/* Reset all trapped signals to their original values. Signals set to be - ignored with trap '' SIGNAL should be ignored, so we make sure that they - are. Called by child processes after they are forked. */ -void -restore_original_signals () -{ - reset_or_restore_signal_handlers (restore_signal); -} - -/* If a trap handler exists for signal SIG, then call it; otherwise just - return failure. Returns 1 if it called the trap handler. */ -int -maybe_call_trap_handler (sig) - int sig; -{ - /* Call the trap handler for SIG if the signal is trapped and not ignored. */ - if ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED) && ((sigmodes[sig] & SIG_IGNORED) == 0)) - { - switch (sig) - { - case SIGINT: - run_interrupt_trap (); - break; - case EXIT_TRAP: - run_exit_trap (); - break; - case DEBUG_TRAP: - run_debug_trap (); - break; - case ERROR_TRAP: - run_error_trap (); - break; - default: - trap_handler (sig); - break; - } - return (1); - } - else - return (0); -} - -int -signal_is_trapped (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_TRAPPED); -} - -int -signal_is_pending (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (pending_traps[sig]); -} - -int -signal_is_special (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_SPECIAL); -} - -int -signal_is_ignored (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_IGNORED); -} - -int -signal_is_hard_ignored (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_HARD_IGNORE); -} - -void -set_signal_ignored (sig) - int sig; -{ - sigmodes[sig] |= SIG_HARD_IGNORE; - original_signals[sig] = SIG_IGN; -} - -int -signal_in_progress (sig) - int sig; -{ - return (sigmodes[sig] & SIG_INPROGRESS); -} diff --git a/variables.c.new b/variables.c.new deleted file mode 100644 index f2c72b9d6..000000000 --- a/variables.c.new +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5285 +0,0 @@ -/* variables.c -- Functions for hacking shell variables. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" -#include "posixtime.h" - -#if defined (__QNX__) -# if defined (__QNXNTO__) -# include -# else -# include -# endif /* !__QNXNTO__ */ -#endif /* __QNX__ */ - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#include -#include "chartypes.h" -#if defined (HAVE_PWD_H) -# include -#endif -#include "bashansi.h" -#include "bashintl.h" - -#define NEED_XTRACE_SET_DECL - -#include "shell.h" -#include "flags.h" -#include "execute_cmd.h" -#include "findcmd.h" -#include "mailcheck.h" -#include "input.h" -#include "hashcmd.h" -#include "pathexp.h" -#include "alias.h" -#include "jobs.h" - -#include "version.h" - -#include "builtins/getopt.h" -#include "builtins/common.h" -#include "builtins/builtext.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) -# include "bashline.h" -# include -#else -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) -# include "bashhist.h" -# include -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -# include "pcomplete.h" -#endif - -#define TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS 4 /* must be power of two */ - -#define ifsname(s) ((s)[0] == 'I' && (s)[1] == 'F' && (s)[2] == 'S' && (s)[3] == '\0') - -extern char **environ; - -/* Variables used here and defined in other files. */ -extern int posixly_correct; -extern int line_number, line_number_base; -extern int subshell_environment, indirection_level, subshell_level; -extern int build_version, patch_level; -extern int expanding_redir; -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern char *dist_version, *release_status; -extern char *shell_name; -extern char *primary_prompt, *secondary_prompt; -extern char *current_host_name; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *this_shell_builtin; -extern SHELL_VAR *this_shell_function; -extern char *the_printed_command_except_trap; -extern char *this_command_name; -extern char *command_execution_string; -extern time_t shell_start_time; -extern int assigning_in_environment; -extern int executing_builtin; -extern int funcnest_max; - -#if defined (READLINE) -extern int no_line_editing; -extern int perform_hostname_completion; -#endif - -/* The list of shell variables that the user has created at the global - scope, or that came from the environment. */ -VAR_CONTEXT *global_variables = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - -/* The current list of shell variables, including function scopes */ -VAR_CONTEXT *shell_variables = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - -/* The list of shell functions that the user has created, or that came from - the environment. */ -HASH_TABLE *shell_functions = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -/* The table of shell function definitions that the user defined or that - came from the environment. */ -HASH_TABLE *shell_function_defs = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; -#endif - -/* The current variable context. This is really a count of how deep into - executing functions we are. */ -int variable_context = 0; - -/* The set of shell assignments which are made only in the environment - for a single command. */ -HASH_TABLE *temporary_env = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - -/* Set to non-zero if an assignment error occurs while putting variables - into the temporary environment. */ -int tempenv_assign_error; - -/* Some funky variables which are known about specially. Here is where - "$*", "$1", and all the cruft is kept. */ -char *dollar_vars[10]; -WORD_LIST *rest_of_args = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - -/* The value of $$. */ -pid_t dollar_dollar_pid; - -/* Non-zero means that we have to remake EXPORT_ENV. */ -int array_needs_making = 1; - -/* The number of times BASH has been executed. This is set - by initialize_variables (). */ -int shell_level = 0; - -/* An array which is passed to commands as their environment. It is - manufactured from the union of the initial environment and the - shell variables that are marked for export. */ -char **export_env = (char **)NULL; -static int export_env_index; -static int export_env_size; - -#if defined (READLINE) -static int winsize_assignment; /* currently assigning to LINES or COLUMNS */ -#endif - -static HASH_TABLE *last_table_searched; /* hash_lookup sets this */ - -/* Some forward declarations. */ -static void create_variable_tables __P((void)); - -static void set_machine_vars __P((void)); -static void set_home_var __P((void)); -static void set_shell_var __P((void)); -static char *get_bash_name __P((void)); -static void initialize_shell_level __P((void)); -static void uidset __P((void)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static void make_vers_array __P((void)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *null_assign __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *null_array_assign __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#endif -static SHELL_VAR *get_self __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *init_dynamic_array_var __P((char *, sh_var_value_func_t *, sh_var_assign_func_t *, int)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_dynamic_assoc_var __P((char *, sh_var_value_func_t *, sh_var_assign_func_t *, int)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_seconds __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_seconds __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_seconds_var __P((void)); - -static int brand __P((void)); -static void sbrand __P((unsigned long)); /* set bash random number generator. */ -static void seedrand __P((void)); /* seed generator randomly */ -static SHELL_VAR *assign_random __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_random __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_lineno __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_lineno __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_subshell __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_subshell __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *get_bashpid __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -#if defined (HISTORY) -static SHELL_VAR *get_histcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -static SHELL_VAR *get_comp_wordbreaks __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_comp_wordbreaks __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#endif - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *assign_dirstack __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_dirstack __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *get_groupset __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *build_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -# if defined (ALIAS) -static SHELL_VAR *build_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -# endif -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *get_funcname __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_funcname_var __P((void)); - -static void initialize_dynamic_variables __P((void)); - -static SHELL_VAR *hash_lookup __P((const char *, HASH_TABLE *)); -static SHELL_VAR *new_shell_variable __P((const char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *make_new_variable __P((const char *, HASH_TABLE *)); -static SHELL_VAR *bind_variable_internal __P((const char *, char *, HASH_TABLE *, int, int)); - -static void dispose_variable_value __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static void free_variable_hash_data __P((PTR_T)); - -static VARLIST *vlist_alloc __P((int)); -static VARLIST *vlist_realloc __P((VARLIST *, int)); -static void vlist_add __P((VARLIST *, SHELL_VAR *, int)); - -static void flatten __P((HASH_TABLE *, sh_var_map_func_t *, VARLIST *, int)); - -static int qsort_var_comp __P((SHELL_VAR **, SHELL_VAR **)); - -static SHELL_VAR **vapply __P((sh_var_map_func_t *)); -static SHELL_VAR **fapply __P((sh_var_map_func_t *)); - -static int visible_var __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int visible_and_exported __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int export_environment_candidate __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int local_and_exported __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int variable_in_context __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static int visible_array_vars __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *find_nameref_at_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *)); -static SHELL_VAR *find_variable_nameref_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *, VAR_CONTEXT **)); -static SHELL_VAR *find_variable_last_nameref_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *, VAR_CONTEXT **)); - -static SHELL_VAR *bind_tempenv_variable __P((const char *, char *)); -static void push_temp_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void propagate_temp_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void dispose_temporary_env __P((sh_free_func_t *)); - -static inline char *mk_env_string __P((const char *, const char *)); -static char **make_env_array_from_var_list __P((SHELL_VAR **)); -static char **make_var_export_array __P((VAR_CONTEXT *)); -static char **make_func_export_array __P((void)); -static void add_temp_array_to_env __P((char **, int, int)); - -static int n_shell_variables __P((void)); -static int set_context __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static void push_func_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void push_exported_var __P((PTR_T)); - -static inline int find_special_var __P((const char *)); - -static void -create_variable_tables () -{ - if (shell_variables == 0) - { - shell_variables = global_variables = new_var_context ((char *)NULL, 0); - shell_variables->scope = 0; - shell_variables->table = hash_create (0); - } - - if (shell_functions == 0) - shell_functions = hash_create (0); - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) - if (shell_function_defs == 0) - shell_function_defs = hash_create (0); -#endif -} - -/* Initialize the shell variables from the current environment. - If PRIVMODE is nonzero, don't import functions from ENV or - parse $SHELLOPTS. */ -void -initialize_shell_variables (env, privmode) - char **env; - int privmode; -{ - char *name, *string, *temp_string; - int c, char_index, string_index, string_length, ro; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - create_variable_tables (); - - for (string_index = 0; string = env[string_index++]; ) - { - char_index = 0; - name = string; - while ((c = *string++) && c != '=') - ; - if (string[-1] == '=') - char_index = string - name - 1; - - /* If there are weird things in the environment, like `=xxx' or a - string without an `=', just skip them. */ - if (char_index == 0) - continue; - - /* ASSERT(name[char_index] == '=') */ - name[char_index] = '\0'; - /* Now, name = env variable name, string = env variable value, and - char_index == strlen (name) */ - - temp_var = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - /* If exported function, define it now. Don't import functions from - the environment in privileged mode. */ - if (privmode == 0 && read_but_dont_execute == 0 && STREQN ("() {", string, 4)) - { - string_length = strlen (string); - temp_string = (char *)xmalloc (3 + string_length + char_index); - - strcpy (temp_string, name); - temp_string[char_index] = ' '; - strcpy (temp_string + char_index + 1, string); - - if (posixly_correct == 0 || legal_identifier (name)) - parse_and_execute (temp_string, name, SEVAL_NONINT|SEVAL_NOHIST); - - /* Ancient backwards compatibility. Old versions of bash exported - functions like name()=() {...} */ - if (name[char_index - 1] == ')' && name[char_index - 2] == '(') - name[char_index - 2] = '\0'; - - if (temp_var = find_function (name)) - { - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported|att_imported)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - else - { - if (temp_var = bind_variable (name, string, 0)) - { - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported | att_invisible)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - last_command_exit_value = 1; - report_error (_("error importing function definition for `%s'"), name); - } - - /* ( */ - if (name[char_index - 1] == ')' && name[char_index - 2] == '\0') - name[char_index - 2] = '('; /* ) */ - } -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -# if ARRAY_EXPORT - /* Array variables may not yet be exported. */ - else if (*string == '(' && string[1] == '[' && string[strlen (string) - 1] == ')') - { - string_length = 1; - temp_string = extract_array_assignment_list (string, &string_length); - temp_var = assign_array_from_string (name, temp_string); - FREE (temp_string); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } -# endif /* ARRAY_EXPORT */ -#endif -#if 0 - else if (legal_identifier (name)) -#else - else -#endif - { - ro = 0; - if (posixly_correct && STREQ (name, "SHELLOPTS")) - { - temp_var = find_variable ("SHELLOPTS"); - ro = temp_var && readonly_p (temp_var); - if (temp_var) - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_readonly); - } - temp_var = bind_variable (name, string, 0); - if (temp_var) - { - if (legal_identifier (name)) - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported)); - else - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported | att_invisible)); - if (ro) - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_readonly); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - } - - name[char_index] = '='; - /* temp_var can be NULL if it was an exported function with a syntax - error (a different bug, but it still shouldn't dump core). */ - if (temp_var && function_p (temp_var) == 0) /* XXX not yet */ - { - CACHE_IMPORTSTR (temp_var, name); - } - } - - set_pwd (); - - /* Set up initial value of $_ */ - temp_var = set_if_not ("_", dollar_vars[0]); - - /* Remember this pid. */ - dollar_dollar_pid = getpid (); - - /* Now make our own defaults in case the vars that we think are - important are missing. */ - temp_var = set_if_not ("PATH", DEFAULT_PATH_VALUE); -#if 0 - set_auto_export (temp_var); /* XXX */ -#endif - - temp_var = set_if_not ("TERM", "dumb"); -#if 0 - set_auto_export (temp_var); /* XXX */ -#endif - -#if defined (__QNX__) - /* set node id -- don't import it from the environment */ - { - char node_name[22]; -# if defined (__QNXNTO__) - netmgr_ndtostr(ND2S_LOCAL_STR, ND_LOCAL_NODE, node_name, sizeof(node_name)); -# else - qnx_nidtostr (getnid (), node_name, sizeof (node_name)); -# endif - temp_var = bind_variable ("NODE", node_name, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - } -#endif - - /* set up the prompts. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { -#if defined (PROMPT_STRING_DECODE) - set_if_not ("PS1", primary_prompt); -#else - if (current_user.uid == -1) - get_current_user_info (); - set_if_not ("PS1", current_user.euid == 0 ? "# " : primary_prompt); -#endif - set_if_not ("PS2", secondary_prompt); - } - set_if_not ("PS4", "+ "); - - /* Don't allow IFS to be imported from the environment. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("IFS", " \t\n", 0); - setifs (temp_var); - - /* Magic machine types. Pretty convenient. */ - set_machine_vars (); - - /* Default MAILCHECK for interactive shells. Defer the creation of a - default MAILPATH until the startup files are read, because MAIL - names a mail file if MAILPATH is not set, and we should provide a - default only if neither is set. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { - temp_var = set_if_not ("MAILCHECK", posixly_correct ? "600" : "60"); - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_integer); - } - - /* Do some things with shell level. */ - initialize_shell_level (); - - set_ppid (); - - /* Initialize the `getopts' stuff. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("OPTIND", "1", 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_integer); - getopts_reset (0); - bind_variable ("OPTERR", "1", 0); - sh_opterr = 1; - - if (login_shell == 1 && posixly_correct == 0) - set_home_var (); - - /* Get the full pathname to THIS shell, and set the BASH variable - to it. */ - name = get_bash_name (); - temp_var = bind_variable ("BASH", name, 0); - free (name); - - /* Make the exported environment variable SHELL be the user's login - shell. Note that the `tset' command looks at this variable - to determine what style of commands to output; if it ends in "csh", - then C-shell commands are output, else Bourne shell commands. */ - set_shell_var (); - - /* Make a variable called BASH_VERSION which contains the version info. */ - bind_variable ("BASH_VERSION", shell_version_string (), 0); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - make_vers_array (); -#endif - - if (command_execution_string) - bind_variable ("BASH_EXECUTION_STRING", command_execution_string, 0); - - /* Find out if we're supposed to be in Posix.2 mode via an - environment variable. */ - temp_var = find_variable ("POSIXLY_CORRECT"); - if (!temp_var) - temp_var = find_variable ("POSIX_PEDANTIC"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_strict_posix (temp_var->name); - -#if defined (HISTORY) - /* Set history variables to defaults, and then do whatever we would - do if the variable had just been set. Do this only in the case - that we are remembering commands on the history list. */ - if (remember_on_history) - { - name = bash_tilde_expand (posixly_correct ? "~/.sh_history" : "~/.bash_history", 0); - - set_if_not ("HISTFILE", name); - free (name); - } -#endif /* HISTORY */ - - /* Seed the random number generator. */ - seedrand (); - - /* Handle some "special" variables that we may have inherited from a - parent shell. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { - temp_var = find_variable ("IGNOREEOF"); - if (!temp_var) - temp_var = find_variable ("ignoreeof"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_ignoreeof (temp_var->name); - } - -#if defined (HISTORY) - if (interactive_shell && remember_on_history) - { - sv_history_control ("HISTCONTROL"); - sv_histignore ("HISTIGNORE"); - sv_histtimefmt ("HISTTIMEFORMAT"); - } -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (READLINE) && defined (STRICT_POSIX) - /* POSIXLY_CORRECT will only be 1 here if the shell was compiled - -DSTRICT_POSIX */ - if (interactive_shell && posixly_correct && no_line_editing == 0) - rl_prefer_env_winsize = 1; -#endif /* READLINE && STRICT_POSIX */ - - /* - * 24 October 2001 - * - * I'm tired of the arguing and bug reports. Bash now leaves SSH_CLIENT - * and SSH2_CLIENT alone. I'm going to rely on the shell_level check in - * isnetconn() to avoid running the startup files more often than wanted. - * That will, of course, only work if the user's login shell is bash, so - * I've made that behavior conditional on SSH_SOURCE_BASHRC being defined - * in config-top.h. - */ -#if 0 - temp_var = find_variable ("SSH_CLIENT"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - { - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - temp_var = find_variable ("SSH2_CLIENT"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - { - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - } -#endif - - /* Get the user's real and effective user ids. */ - uidset (); - - temp_var = find_variable ("BASH_XTRACEFD"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_xtracefd (temp_var->name); - - /* Initialize the dynamic variables, and seed their values. */ - initialize_dynamic_variables (); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Setting values for special shell variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static void -set_machine_vars () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = set_if_not ("HOSTTYPE", HOSTTYPE); - temp_var = set_if_not ("OSTYPE", OSTYPE); - temp_var = set_if_not ("MACHTYPE", MACHTYPE); - - temp_var = set_if_not ("HOSTNAME", current_host_name); -} - -/* Set $HOME to the information in the password file if we didn't get - it from the environment. */ - -/* This function is not static so the tilde and readline libraries can - use it. */ -char * -sh_get_home_dir () -{ - if (current_user.home_dir == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - return current_user.home_dir; -} - -static void -set_home_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = find_variable ("HOME"); - if (temp_var == 0) - temp_var = bind_variable ("HOME", sh_get_home_dir (), 0); -#if 0 - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); -#endif -} - -/* Set $SHELL to the user's login shell if it is not already set. Call - get_current_user_info if we haven't already fetched the shell. */ -static void -set_shell_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = find_variable ("SHELL"); - if (temp_var == 0) - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - temp_var = bind_variable ("SHELL", current_user.shell, 0); - } -#if 0 - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); -#endif -} - -static char * -get_bash_name () -{ - char *name; - - if ((login_shell == 1) && RELPATH(shell_name)) - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - name = savestring (current_user.shell); - } - else if (ABSPATH(shell_name)) - name = savestring (shell_name); - else if (shell_name[0] == '.' && shell_name[1] == '/') - { - /* Fast path for common case. */ - char *cdir; - int len; - - cdir = get_string_value ("PWD"); - if (cdir) - { - len = strlen (cdir); - name = (char *)xmalloc (len + strlen (shell_name) + 1); - strcpy (name, cdir); - strcpy (name + len, shell_name + 1); - } - else - name = savestring (shell_name); - } - else - { - char *tname; - int s; - - tname = find_user_command (shell_name); - - if (tname == 0) - { - /* Try the current directory. If there is not an executable - there, just punt and use the login shell. */ - s = file_status (shell_name); - if (s & FS_EXECABLE) - { - tname = make_absolute (shell_name, get_string_value ("PWD")); - if (*shell_name == '.') - { - name = sh_canonpath (tname, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - if (name == 0) - name = tname; - else - free (tname); - } - else - name = tname; - } - else - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - name = savestring (current_user.shell); - } - } - else - { - name = full_pathname (tname); - free (tname); - } - } - - return (name); -} - -void -adjust_shell_level (change) - int change; -{ - char new_level[5], *old_SHLVL; - intmax_t old_level; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - old_SHLVL = get_string_value ("SHLVL"); - if (old_SHLVL == 0 || *old_SHLVL == '\0' || legal_number (old_SHLVL, &old_level) == 0) - old_level = 0; - - shell_level = old_level + change; - if (shell_level < 0) - shell_level = 0; - else if (shell_level > 1000) - { - internal_warning (_("shell level (%d) too high, resetting to 1"), shell_level); - shell_level = 1; - } - - /* We don't need the full generality of itos here. */ - if (shell_level < 10) - { - new_level[0] = shell_level + '0'; - new_level[1] = '\0'; - } - else if (shell_level < 100) - { - new_level[0] = (shell_level / 10) + '0'; - new_level[1] = (shell_level % 10) + '0'; - new_level[2] = '\0'; - } - else if (shell_level < 1000) - { - new_level[0] = (shell_level / 100) + '0'; - old_level = shell_level % 100; - new_level[1] = (old_level / 10) + '0'; - new_level[2] = (old_level % 10) + '0'; - new_level[3] = '\0'; - } - - temp_var = bind_variable ("SHLVL", new_level, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); -} - -static void -initialize_shell_level () -{ - adjust_shell_level (1); -} - -/* If we got PWD from the environment, update our idea of the current - working directory. In any case, make sure that PWD exists before - checking it. It is possible for getcwd () to fail on shell startup, - and in that case, PWD would be undefined. If this is an interactive - login shell, see if $HOME is the current working directory, and if - that's not the same string as $PWD, set PWD=$HOME. */ - -void -set_pwd () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var, *home_var; - char *temp_string, *home_string; - - home_var = find_variable ("HOME"); - home_string = home_var ? value_cell (home_var) : (char *)NULL; - - temp_var = find_variable ("PWD"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var) && - (temp_string = value_cell (temp_var)) && - same_file (temp_string, ".", (struct stat *)NULL, (struct stat *)NULL)) - set_working_directory (temp_string); - else if (home_string && interactive_shell && login_shell && - same_file (home_string, ".", (struct stat *)NULL, (struct stat *)NULL)) - { - set_working_directory (home_string); - temp_var = bind_variable ("PWD", home_string, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - } - else - { - temp_string = get_working_directory ("shell-init"); - if (temp_string) - { - temp_var = bind_variable ("PWD", temp_string, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - free (temp_string); - } - } - - /* According to the Single Unix Specification, v2, $OLDPWD is an - `environment variable' and therefore should be auto-exported. - Make a dummy invisible variable for OLDPWD, and mark it as exported. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("OLDPWD", (char *)NULL, 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_invisible)); -} - -/* Make a variable $PPID, which holds the pid of the shell's parent. */ -void -set_ppid () -{ - char namebuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(pid_t) + 1], *name; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - name = inttostr (getppid (), namebuf, sizeof(namebuf)); - temp_var = find_variable ("PPID"); - if (temp_var) - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, (att_readonly | att_exported)); - temp_var = bind_variable ("PPID", name, 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_readonly | att_integer)); -} - -static void -uidset () -{ - char buff[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(uid_t) + 1], *b; - register SHELL_VAR *v; - - b = inttostr (current_user.uid, buff, sizeof (buff)); - v = find_variable ("UID"); - if (v == 0) - { - v = bind_variable ("UID", b, 0); - VSETATTR (v, (att_readonly | att_integer)); - } - - if (current_user.euid != current_user.uid) - b = inttostr (current_user.euid, buff, sizeof (buff)); - - v = find_variable ("EUID"); - if (v == 0) - { - v = bind_variable ("EUID", b, 0); - VSETATTR (v, (att_readonly | att_integer)); - } -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static void -make_vers_array () -{ - SHELL_VAR *vv; - ARRAY *av; - char *s, d[32], b[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - unbind_variable ("BASH_VERSINFO"); - - vv = make_new_array_variable ("BASH_VERSINFO"); - av = array_cell (vv); - strcpy (d, dist_version); - s = strchr (d, '.'); - if (s) - *s++ = '\0'; - array_insert (av, 0, d); - array_insert (av, 1, s); - s = inttostr (patch_level, b, sizeof (b)); - array_insert (av, 2, s); - s = inttostr (build_version, b, sizeof (b)); - array_insert (av, 3, s); - array_insert (av, 4, release_status); - array_insert (av, 5, MACHTYPE); - - VSETATTR (vv, att_readonly); -} -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -/* Set the environment variables $LINES and $COLUMNS in response to - a window size change. */ -void -sh_set_lines_and_columns (lines, cols) - int lines, cols; -{ - char val[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1], *v; - -#if defined (READLINE) - /* If we are currently assigning to LINES or COLUMNS, don't do anything. */ - if (winsize_assignment) - return; -#endif - - v = inttostr (lines, val, sizeof (val)); - bind_variable ("LINES", v, 0); - - v = inttostr (cols, val, sizeof (val)); - bind_variable ("COLUMNS", v, 0); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Printing variables and values */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Print LIST (a list of shell variables) to stdout in such a way that - they can be read back in. */ -void -print_var_list (list) - register SHELL_VAR **list; -{ - register int i; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - - for (i = 0; list && (var = list[i]); i++) - if (invisible_p (var) == 0) - print_assignment (var); -} - -/* Print LIST (a list of shell functions) to stdout in such a way that - they can be read back in. */ -void -print_func_list (list) - register SHELL_VAR **list; -{ - register int i; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - - for (i = 0; list && (var = list[i]); i++) - { - printf ("%s ", var->name); - print_var_function (var); - printf ("\n"); - } -} - -/* Print the value of a single SHELL_VAR. No newline is - output, but the variable is printed in such a way that - it can be read back in. */ -void -print_assignment (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var_isset (var) == 0) - return; - - if (function_p (var)) - { - printf ("%s", var->name); - print_var_function (var); - printf ("\n"); - } -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - print_array_assignment (var, 0); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - print_assoc_assignment (var, 0); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - else - { - printf ("%s=", var->name); - print_var_value (var, 1); - printf ("\n"); - } -} - -/* Print the value cell of VAR, a shell variable. Do not print - the name, nor leading/trailing newline. If QUOTE is non-zero, - and the value contains shell metacharacters, quote the value - in such a way that it can be read back in. */ -void -print_var_value (var, quote) - SHELL_VAR *var; - int quote; -{ - char *t; - - if (var_isset (var) == 0) - return; - - if (quote && posixly_correct == 0 && ansic_shouldquote (value_cell (var))) - { - t = ansic_quote (value_cell (var), 0, (int *)0); - printf ("%s", t); - free (t); - } - else if (quote && sh_contains_shell_metas (value_cell (var))) - { - t = sh_single_quote (value_cell (var)); - printf ("%s", t); - free (t); - } - else - printf ("%s", value_cell (var)); -} - -/* Print the function cell of VAR, a shell variable. Do not - print the name, nor leading/trailing newline. */ -void -print_var_function (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *x; - - if (function_p (var) && var_isset (var)) - { - x = named_function_string ((char *)NULL, function_cell(var), FUNC_MULTILINE|FUNC_EXTERNAL); - printf ("%s", x); - } -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Dynamic Variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* DYNAMIC VARIABLES - - These are variables whose values are generated anew each time they are - referenced. These are implemented using a pair of function pointers - in the struct variable: assign_func, which is called from bind_variable - and, if arrays are compiled into the shell, some of the functions in - arrayfunc.c, and dynamic_value, which is called from find_variable. - - assign_func is called from bind_variable_internal, if - bind_variable_internal discovers that the variable being assigned to - has such a function. The function is called as - SHELL_VAR *temp = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, value, ind) - and the (SHELL_VAR *)temp is returned as the value of bind_variable. It - is usually ENTRY (self). IND is an index for an array variable, and - unused otherwise. - - dynamic_value is called from find_variable_internal to return a `new' - value for the specified dynamic varible. If this function is NULL, - the variable is treated as a `normal' shell variable. If it is not, - however, then this function is called like this: - tempvar = (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var); - - Sometimes `tempvar' will replace the value of `var'. Other times, the - shell will simply use the string value. Pretty object-oriented, huh? - - Be warned, though: if you `unset' a special variable, it loses its - special meaning, even if you subsequently set it. - - The special assignment code would probably have been better put in - subst.c: do_assignment_internal, in the same style as - stupidly_hack_special_variables, but I wanted the changes as - localized as possible. */ - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR(var, val, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = bind_variable (var, (val), 0); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR(var, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = make_new_array_variable (var); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_ASSOC_VAR(var, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = make_new_assoc_variable (var); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -static SHELL_VAR * -null_assign (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - return (self); -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR * -null_array_assign (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - return (self); -} -#endif - -/* Degenerate `dynamic_value' function; just returns what's passed without - manipulation. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_self (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - return (self); -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* A generic dynamic array variable initializer. Intialize array variable - NAME with dynamic value function GETFUNC and assignment function SETFUNC. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -init_dynamic_array_var (name, getfunc, setfunc, attrs) - char *name; - sh_var_value_func_t *getfunc; - sh_var_assign_func_t *setfunc; - int attrs; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v) - return (v); - INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR (name, getfunc, setfunc); - if (attrs) - VSETATTR (v, attrs); - return v; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_dynamic_assoc_var (name, getfunc, setfunc, attrs) - char *name; - sh_var_value_func_t *getfunc; - sh_var_assign_func_t *setfunc; - int attrs; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v) - return (v); - INIT_DYNAMIC_ASSOC_VAR (name, getfunc, setfunc); - if (attrs) - VSETATTR (v, attrs); - return v; -} -#endif - -/* The value of $SECONDS. This is the number of seconds since shell - invocation, or, the number of seconds since the last assignment + the - value of the last assignment. */ -static intmax_t seconds_value_assigned; - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_seconds (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - if (legal_number (value, &seconds_value_assigned) == 0) - seconds_value_assigned = 0; - shell_start_time = NOW; - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_seconds (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - time_t time_since_start; - char *p; - - time_since_start = NOW - shell_start_time; - p = itos(seconds_value_assigned + time_since_start); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - VSETATTR (var, att_integer); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_seconds_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("SECONDS"); - if (v) - { - if (legal_number (value_cell(v), &seconds_value_assigned) == 0) - seconds_value_assigned = 0; - } - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("SECONDS", (v ? value_cell (v) : (char *)NULL), get_seconds, assign_seconds); - return v; -} - -/* The random number seed. You can change this by setting RANDOM. */ -static unsigned long rseed = 1; -static int last_random_value; -static int seeded_subshell = 0; - -/* A linear congruential random number generator based on the example - one in the ANSI C standard. This one isn't very good, but a more - complicated one is overkill. */ - -/* Returns a pseudo-random number between 0 and 32767. */ -static int -brand () -{ - /* From "Random number generators: good ones are hard to find", - Park and Miller, Communications of the ACM, vol. 31, no. 10, - October 1988, p. 1195. filtered through FreeBSD */ - long h, l; - - /* Can't seed with 0. */ - if (rseed == 0) - rseed = 123459876; - h = rseed / 127773; - l = rseed % 127773; - rseed = 16807 * l - 2836 * h; -#if 0 - if (rseed < 0) - rseed += 0x7fffffff; -#endif - return ((unsigned int)(rseed & 32767)); /* was % 32768 */ -} - -/* Set the random number generator seed to SEED. */ -static void -sbrand (seed) - unsigned long seed; -{ - rseed = seed; - last_random_value = 0; -} - -static void -seedrand () -{ - struct timeval tv; - - gettimeofday (&tv, NULL); - sbrand (tv.tv_sec ^ tv.tv_usec ^ getpid ()); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_random (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - sbrand (strtoul (value, (char **)NULL, 10)); - if (subshell_environment) - seeded_subshell = getpid (); - return (self); -} - -int -get_random_number () -{ - int rv, pid; - - /* Reset for command and process substitution. */ - pid = getpid (); - if (subshell_environment && seeded_subshell != pid) - { - seedrand (); - seeded_subshell = pid; - } - - do - rv = brand (); - while (rv == last_random_value); - return rv; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_random (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - int rv; - char *p; - - rv = get_random_number (); - last_random_value = rv; - p = itos (rv); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - VSETATTR (var, att_integer); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_lineno (var, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - intmax_t new_value; - - if (value == 0 || *value == '\0' || legal_number (value, &new_value) == 0) - new_value = 0; - line_number = line_number_base = new_value; - return var; -} - -/* Function which returns the current line number. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_lineno (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - int ln; - - ln = executing_line_number (); - p = itos (ln); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_subshell (var, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - intmax_t new_value; - - if (value == 0 || *value == '\0' || legal_number (value, &new_value) == 0) - new_value = 0; - subshell_level = new_value; - return var; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_subshell (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - p = itos (subshell_level); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_bashpid (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - int pid; - char *p; - - pid = getpid (); - p = itos (pid); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - VSETATTR (var, att_integer|att_readonly); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_bash_command (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - if (the_printed_command_except_trap) - p = savestring (the_printed_command_except_trap); - else - { - p = (char *)xmalloc (1); - p[0] = '\0'; - } - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -#if defined (HISTORY) -static SHELL_VAR * -get_histcmd (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - p = itos (history_number ()); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -/* When this function returns, VAR->value points to malloced memory. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_comp_wordbreaks (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - /* If we don't have anything yet, assign a default value. */ - if (rl_completer_word_break_characters == 0 && bash_readline_initialized == 0) - enable_hostname_completion (perform_hostname_completion); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, savestring (rl_completer_word_break_characters)); - - return (var); -} - -/* When this function returns, rl_completer_word_break_characters points to - malloced memory. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_comp_wordbreaks (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - if (rl_completer_word_break_characters && - rl_completer_word_break_characters != rl_basic_word_break_characters) - free (rl_completer_word_break_characters); - - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (value); - return self; -} -#endif /* READLINE */ - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_dirstack (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - set_dirstack_element (ind, 1, value); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_dirstack (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - ARRAY *a; - WORD_LIST *l; - - l = get_directory_stack (0); - a = array_from_word_list (l); - array_dispose (array_cell (self)); - dispose_words (l); - var_setarray (self, a); - return self; -} -#endif /* PUSHD AND POPD && ARRAY_VARS */ - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* We don't want to initialize the group set with a call to getgroups() - unless we're asked to, but we only want to do it once. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_groupset (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - register int i; - int ng; - ARRAY *a; - static char **group_set = (char **)NULL; - - if (group_set == 0) - { - group_set = get_group_list (&ng); - a = array_cell (self); - for (i = 0; i < ng; i++) - array_insert (a, i, group_set[i]); - } - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -build_hashcmd (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - HASH_TABLE *h; - int i; - char *k, *v; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *item; - - h = assoc_cell (self); - if (h) - assoc_dispose (h); - - if (hashed_filenames == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (hashed_filenames) == 0) - { - var_setvalue (self, (char *)NULL); - return self; - } - - h = assoc_create (hashed_filenames->nbuckets); - for (i = 0; i < hashed_filenames->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (item = hash_items (i, hashed_filenames); item; item = item->next) - { - k = savestring (item->key); - v = pathdata(item)->path; - assoc_insert (h, k, v); - } - } - - var_setvalue (self, (char *)h); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_hashcmd (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - build_hashcmd (self); - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_hashcmd (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - phash_insert (key, value, 0, 0); - return (build_hashcmd (self)); -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static SHELL_VAR * -build_aliasvar (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - HASH_TABLE *h; - int i; - char *k, *v; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *item; - - h = assoc_cell (self); - if (h) - assoc_dispose (h); - - if (aliases == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (aliases) == 0) - { - var_setvalue (self, (char *)NULL); - return self; - } - - h = assoc_create (aliases->nbuckets); - for (i = 0; i < aliases->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (item = hash_items (i, aliases); item; item = item->next) - { - k = savestring (item->key); - v = ((alias_t *)(item->data))->value; - assoc_insert (h, k, v); - } - } - - var_setvalue (self, (char *)h); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_aliasvar (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - build_aliasvar (self); - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_aliasvar (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - add_alias (key, value); - return (build_aliasvar (self)); -} -#endif /* ALIAS */ - -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -/* If ARRAY_VARS is not defined, this just returns the name of any - currently-executing function. If we have arrays, it's a call stack. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_funcname (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ -#if ! defined (ARRAY_VARS) - char *t; - if (variable_context && this_shell_function) - { - FREE (value_cell (self)); - t = savestring (this_shell_function->name); - var_setvalue (self, t); - } -#endif - return (self); -} - -void -make_funcname_visible (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("FUNCNAME"); - if (v == 0 || v->dynamic_value == 0) - return; - - if (on_or_off) - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - else - VSETATTR (v, att_invisible); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_funcname_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("FUNCNAME"); - if (v) - return v; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR ("FUNCNAME", get_funcname, null_array_assign); -#else - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("FUNCNAME", (char *)NULL, get_funcname, null_assign); -#endif - VSETATTR (v, att_invisible|att_noassign); - return v; -} - -static void -initialize_dynamic_variables () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = init_seconds_var (); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASH_COMMAND", (char *)NULL, get_bash_command, (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL); - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASH_SUBSHELL", (char *)NULL, get_subshell, assign_subshell); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("RANDOM", (char *)NULL, get_random, assign_random); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("LINENO", (char *)NULL, get_lineno, assign_lineno); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASHPID", (char *)NULL, get_bashpid, null_assign); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer|att_readonly); - -#if defined (HISTORY) - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("HISTCMD", (char *)NULL, get_histcmd, (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("COMP_WORDBREAKS", (char *)NULL, get_comp_wordbreaks, assign_comp_wordbreaks); -#endif - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("DIRSTACK", get_dirstack, assign_dirstack, 0); -#endif /* PUSHD_AND_POPD && ARRAY_VARS */ - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("GROUPS", get_groupset, null_array_assign, att_noassign); - -# if defined (DEBUGGER) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_ARGC", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_ARGV", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); -# endif /* DEBUGGER */ - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_SOURCE", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_LINENO", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - - v = init_dynamic_assoc_var ("BASH_CMDS", get_hashcmd, assign_hashcmd, att_nofree); -# if defined (ALIAS) - v = init_dynamic_assoc_var ("BASH_ALIASES", get_aliasvar, assign_aliasvar, att_nofree); -# endif -#endif - - v = init_funcname_var (); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Retrieving variables and values */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* How to get a pointer to the shell variable or function named NAME. - HASHED_VARS is a pointer to the hash table containing the list - of interest (either variables or functions). */ - -static SHELL_VAR * -hash_lookup (name, hashed_vars) - const char *name; - HASH_TABLE *hashed_vars; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *bucket; - - bucket = hash_search (name, hashed_vars, 0); - /* If we find the name in HASHED_VARS, set LAST_TABLE_SEARCHED to that - table. */ - if (bucket) - last_table_searched = hashed_vars; - return (bucket ? (SHELL_VAR *)bucket->data : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -var_lookup (name, vcontext) - const char *name; - VAR_CONTEXT *vcontext; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - for (vc = vcontext; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (v = hash_lookup (name, vc->table)) - break; - - return v; -} - -/* Look up the variable entry named NAME. If SEARCH_TEMPENV is non-zero, - then also search the temporarily built list of exported variables. - The lookup order is: - temporary_env - shell_variables list -*/ - -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_internal (name, force_tempenv) - const char *name; - int force_tempenv; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - int search_tempenv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - /* If explicitly requested, first look in the temporary environment for - the variable. This allows constructs such as "foo=x eval 'echo $foo'" - to get the `exported' value of $foo. This happens if we are executing - a function or builtin, or if we are looking up a variable in a - "subshell environment". */ - search_tempenv = force_tempenv || (expanding_redir == 0 && subshell_environment); - - if (search_tempenv && temporary_env) - var = hash_lookup (name, temporary_env); - - vc = shell_variables; -#if 0 -if (search_tempenv == 0 && /* (subshell_environment & SUBSHELL_COMSUB) && */ - expanding_redir && - (this_shell_builtin == eval_builtin || this_shell_builtin == command_builtin)) - { - itrace("find_variable_internal: search_tempenv == 0: skipping VC_BLTNENV"); - while (vc && (vc->flags & VC_BLTNENV)) - vc = vc->down; - if (vc == 0) - vc = shell_variables; - } -#endif - - if (var == 0) - var = var_lookup (name, vc); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -/* Look up and resolve the chain of nameref variables starting at V all the - way to NULL or non-nameref. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_nameref (v) - SHELL_VAR *v; -{ - int level; - char *newname; - SHELL_VAR *orig, *oldv; - - level = 0; - orig = v; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - oldv = v; - v = find_variable_internal (newname, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - if (v == orig || v == oldv) - { - internal_warning (_("%s: circular name reference"), orig->name); - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - } - } - return v; -} - -/* Resolve the chain of nameref variables for NAME. XXX - could change later */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_last_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v = find_variable_noref (name); - level = 0; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - nv = v; - v = find_variable_internal (newname, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - } - return nv; -} - -/* Resolve the chain of nameref variables for NAME. XXX - could change later */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable_last_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v = find_global_variable_noref (name); - level = 0; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - nv = v; - v = find_global_variable_noref (newname); - } - return nv; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -find_nameref_at_context (v, vc) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v; - level = 1; - while (nv && nameref_p (nv)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - newname = nameref_cell (nv); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - nv2 = hash_lookup (newname, vc->table); - if (nv2 == 0) - break; - nv = nv2; - } - return nv; -} - -/* Do nameref resolution from the VC, which is the local context for some - function or builtin, `up' the chain to the global variables context. If - NVCP is not NULL, return the variable context where we finally ended the - nameref resolution (so the bind_variable_internal can use the correct - variable context and hash table). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_nameref_context (v, vc, nvcp) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - VAR_CONTEXT **nvcp; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - - /* Look starting at the current context all the way `up' */ - for (nv = v, nvc = vc; nvc; nvc = nvc->down) - { - nv2 = find_nameref_at_context (nv, nvc); - if (nv2 == 0) - continue; - nv = nv2; - if (*nvcp) - *nvcp = nvc; - } - return (nameref_p (nv) ? (SHELL_VAR *)NULL : nv); -} - -/* Do nameref resolution from the VC, which is the local context for some - function or builtin, `up' the chain to the global variables context. If - NVCP is not NULL, return the variable context where we finally ended the - nameref resolution (so the bind_variable_internal can use the correct - variable context and hash table). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_last_nameref_context (v, vc, nvcp) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - VAR_CONTEXT **nvcp; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - - /* Look starting at the current context all the way `up' */ - for (nv = v, nvc = vc; nvc; nvc = nvc->down) - { - nv2 = find_nameref_at_context (nv, nvc); - if (nv2 == 0) - continue; - nv = nv2; - if (*nvcp) - *nvcp = nvc; - } - return (nameref_p (nv) ? nv : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -/* Find a variable, forcing a search of the temporary environment first */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_tempenv (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable_internal (name, 1); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - return (var); -} - -/* Find a variable, not forcing a search of the temporary environment first */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_notempenv (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable_internal (name, 0); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - return (var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, global_variables); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable_noref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, global_variables); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_shell_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -/* Look up the variable entry named NAME. Returns the entry or NULL. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - last_table_searched = 0; - v = find_variable_internal (name, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - v = find_variable_nameref (v); - return v; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_noref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable_internal (name, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - return v; -} - -/* Look up the function entry whose name matches STRING. - Returns the entry or NULL. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_function (name) - const char *name; -{ - return (hash_lookup (name, shell_functions)); -} - -/* Find the function definition for the shell function named NAME. Returns - the entry or NULL. */ -FUNCTION_DEF * -find_function_def (name) - const char *name; -{ -#if defined (DEBUGGER) - return ((FUNCTION_DEF *)hash_lookup (name, shell_function_defs)); -#else - return ((FUNCTION_DEF *)0); -#endif -} - -/* Return the value of VAR. VAR is assumed to have been the result of a - lookup without any subscript, if arrays are compiled into the shell. */ -char * -get_variable_value (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var == 0) - return ((char *)NULL); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - return (array_reference (array_cell (var), 0)); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - return (assoc_reference (assoc_cell (var), "0")); -#endif - else - return (value_cell (var)); -} - -/* Return the string value of a variable. Return NULL if the variable - doesn't exist. Don't cons a new string. This is a potential memory - leak if the variable is found in the temporary environment. Since - functions and variables have separate name spaces, returns NULL if - var_name is a shell function only. */ -char * -get_string_value (var_name) - const char *var_name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable (var_name); - return ((var) ? get_variable_value (var) : (char *)NULL); -} - -/* This is present for use by the tilde and readline libraries. */ -char * -sh_get_env_value (v) - const char *v; -{ - return get_string_value (v); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating and setting variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Set NAME to VALUE if NAME has no value. */ -SHELL_VAR * -set_if_not (name, value) - char *name, *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - v = bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, HASH_NOSRCH, 0); - return (v); -} - -/* Create a local variable referenced by NAME. */ -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *new_var, *old_var; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - int was_tmpvar; - char *tmp_value; - - /* local foo; local foo; is a no-op. */ - old_var = find_variable (name); - if (old_var && local_p (old_var) && old_var->context == variable_context) - { - VUNSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - return (old_var); - } - - was_tmpvar = old_var && tempvar_p (old_var); - /* If we're making a local variable in a shell function, the temporary env - has already been merged into the function's variable context stack. We - can assume that a temporary var in the same context appears in the same - VAR_CONTEXT and can safely be returned without creating a new variable - (which results in duplicate names in the same VAR_CONTEXT->table */ - /* We can't just test tmpvar_p because variables in the temporary env given - to a shell function appear in the function's local variable VAR_CONTEXT - but retain their tempvar attribute. We want temporary variables that are - found in temporary_env, hence the test for last_table_searched, which is - set in hash_lookup and only (so far) checked here. */ - if (was_tmpvar && old_var->context == variable_context && last_table_searched != temporary_env) - { - VUNSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - return (old_var); - } - if (was_tmpvar) - tmp_value = value_cell (old_var); - - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - - if (vc == 0) - { - internal_error (_("make_local_variable: no function context at current scope")); - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - } - else if (vc->table == 0) - vc->table = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - - /* Since this is called only from the local/declare/typeset code, we can - call builtin_error here without worry (of course, it will also work - for anything that sets this_command_name). Variables with the `noassign' - attribute may not be made local. The test against old_var's context - level is to disallow local copies of readonly global variables (since I - believe that this could be a security hole). Readonly copies of calling - function local variables are OK. */ - if (old_var && (noassign_p (old_var) || - (readonly_p (old_var) && old_var->context == 0))) - { - if (readonly_p (old_var)) - sh_readonly (name); - else if (noassign_p (old_var)) - builtin_error (_("%s: variable may not be assigned value"), name); -#if 0 - /* Let noassign variables through with a warning */ - if (readonly_p (old_var)) -#endif - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - } - - if (old_var == 0) - new_var = make_new_variable (name, vc->table); - else - { - new_var = make_new_variable (name, vc->table); - - /* If we found this variable in one of the temporary environments, - inherit its value. Watch to see if this causes problems with - things like `x=4 local x'. XXX - see above for temporary env - variables with the same context level as variable_context */ - /* XXX - we should only do this if the variable is not an array. */ - if (was_tmpvar) - var_setvalue (new_var, savestring (tmp_value)); - - new_var->attributes = exported_p (old_var) ? att_exported : 0; - } - - vc->flags |= VC_HASLOCAL; - - new_var->context = variable_context; - VSETATTR (new_var, att_local); - - if (ifsname (name)) - setifs (new_var); - - return (new_var); -} - -/* Create a new shell variable with name NAME. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -new_shell_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = (SHELL_VAR *)xmalloc (sizeof (SHELL_VAR)); - - entry->name = savestring (name); - var_setvalue (entry, (char *)NULL); - CLEAR_EXPORTSTR (entry); - - entry->dynamic_value = (sh_var_value_func_t *)NULL; - entry->assign_func = (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL; - - entry->attributes = 0; - - /* Always assume variables are to be made at toplevel! - make_local_variable has the responsibilty of changing the - variable context. */ - entry->context = 0; - - return (entry); -} - -/* Create a new shell variable with name NAME and add it to the hash table - TABLE. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -make_new_variable (name, table) - const char *name; - HASH_TABLE *table; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - - entry = new_shell_variable (name); - - /* Make sure we have a shell_variables hash table to add to. */ - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), table, HASH_NOSRCH); - elt->data = (PTR_T)entry; - - return entry; -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -SHELL_VAR * -make_new_array_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - ARRAY *array; - - entry = make_new_variable (name, global_variables->table); - array = array_create (); - - var_setarray (entry, array); - VSETATTR (entry, att_array); - return entry; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_array_variable (name, assoc_ok) - char *name; - int assoc_ok; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - ARRAY *array; - - var = make_local_variable (name); - if (var == 0 || array_p (var) || (assoc_ok && assoc_p (var))) - return var; - - array = array_create (); - - dispose_variable_value (var); - var_setarray (var, array); - VSETATTR (var, att_array); - return var; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_new_assoc_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - HASH_TABLE *hash; - - entry = make_new_variable (name, global_variables->table); - hash = assoc_create (0); - - var_setassoc (entry, hash); - VSETATTR (entry, att_assoc); - return entry; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_assoc_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - HASH_TABLE *hash; - - var = make_local_variable (name); - if (var == 0 || assoc_p (var)) - return var; - - dispose_variable_value (var); - hash = assoc_create (0); - - var_setassoc (var, hash); - VSETATTR (var, att_assoc); - return var; -} -#endif - -char * -make_variable_value (var, value, flags) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - char *retval, *oval; - intmax_t lval, rval; - int expok, olen, op; - - /* If this variable has had its type set to integer (via `declare -i'), - then do expression evaluation on it and store the result. The - functions in expr.c (evalexp()) and bind_int_variable() are responsible - for turning off the integer flag if they don't want further - evaluation done. */ - if (integer_p (var)) - { - rval = evalexp (value, &expok); - if (expok == 0) - { - top_level_cleanup (); - jump_to_top_level (DISCARD); - } - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = value_cell (var); - lval = evalexp (oval, &expok); /* ksh93 seems to do this */ - if (expok == 0) - { - top_level_cleanup (); - jump_to_top_level (DISCARD); - } - rval += lval; - } - /* This can be fooled if the variable's value changes while evaluating - `rval'. We can change it if we move the evaluation of lval to here. */ - retval = itos (rval); - } -#if defined (CASEMOD_ATTRS) - else if (capcase_p (var) || uppercase_p (var) || lowercase_p (var)) - { - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = get_variable_value (var); - if (oval == 0) /* paranoia */ - oval = ""; - olen = STRLEN (oval); - retval = (char *)xmalloc (olen + (value ? STRLEN (value) : 0) + 1); - strcpy (retval, oval); - if (value) - strcpy (retval+olen, value); - } - else if (*value) - retval = savestring (value); - else - { - retval = (char *)xmalloc (1); - retval[0] = '\0'; - } - op = capcase_p (var) ? CASE_CAPITALIZE - : (uppercase_p (var) ? CASE_UPPER : CASE_LOWER); - oval = sh_modcase (retval, (char *)0, op); - free (retval); - retval = oval; - } -#endif /* CASEMOD_ATTRS */ - else if (value) - { - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = get_variable_value (var); - if (oval == 0) /* paranoia */ - oval = ""; - olen = STRLEN (oval); - retval = (char *)xmalloc (olen + (value ? STRLEN (value) : 0) + 1); - strcpy (retval, oval); - if (value) - strcpy (retval+olen, value); - } - else if (*value) - retval = savestring (value); - else - { - retval = (char *)xmalloc (1); - retval[0] = '\0'; - } - } - else - retval = (char *)NULL; - - return retval; -} - -/* Bind a variable NAME to VALUE in the HASH_TABLE TABLE, which may be the - temporary environment (but usually is not). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable_internal (name, value, table, hflags, aflags) - const char *name; - char *value; - HASH_TABLE *table; - int hflags, aflags; -{ - char *newval; - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = (hflags & HASH_NOSRCH) ? (SHELL_VAR *)NULL : hash_lookup (name, table); - /* Follow the nameref chain here if this is the global variables table */ - if (entry && nameref_p (entry) && (invisible_p (entry) == 0) && table == global_variables->table) - { - entry = find_global_variable (entry->name); - /* Let's see if we have a nameref referencing a variable that hasn't yet - been created. */ - if (entry == 0) - entry = find_variable_last_nameref (name); /* XXX */ - if (entry == 0) /* just in case */ - return (entry); - } - - /* The first clause handles `declare -n ref; ref=x;' */ - if (entry && invisible_p (entry) && nameref_p (entry)) - goto assign_value; - else if (entry && nameref_p (entry)) - { - newval = nameref_cell (entry); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - /* declare -n foo=x[2] */ - if (valid_array_reference (newval)) - /* XXX - should it be aflags? */ - entry = assign_array_element (newval, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0), aflags); - else -#endif - { - entry = make_new_variable (newval, table); - var_setvalue (entry, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0)); - } - } - else if (entry == 0) - { - entry = make_new_variable (name, table); - var_setvalue (entry, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0)); /* XXX */ - } - else if (entry->assign_func) /* array vars have assign functions now */ - { - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - newval = (aflags & ASS_APPEND) ? make_variable_value (entry, value, aflags) : value; - if (assoc_p (entry)) - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, -1, savestring ("0")); - else if (array_p (entry)) - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, 0, 0); - else - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, -1, 0); - if (newval != value) - free (newval); - return (entry); - } - else - { -assign_value: - if (readonly_p (entry) || noassign_p (entry)) - { - if (readonly_p (entry)) - err_readonly (name); - return (entry); - } - - /* Variables which are bound are visible. */ - VUNSETATTR (entry, att_invisible); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (assoc_p (entry) || array_p (entry)) - newval = make_array_variable_value (entry, 0, "0", value, aflags); - else -#endif - - newval = make_variable_value (entry, value, aflags); /* XXX */ - - /* Invalidate any cached export string */ - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - /* XXX -- this bears looking at again -- XXX */ - /* If an existing array variable x is being assigned to with x=b or - `read x' or something of that nature, silently convert it to - x[0]=b or `read x[0]'. */ - if (assoc_p (entry)) - { - assoc_insert (assoc_cell (entry), savestring ("0"), newval); - free (newval); - } - else if (array_p (entry)) - { - array_insert (array_cell (entry), 0, newval); - free (newval); - } - else -#endif - { - FREE (value_cell (entry)); - var_setvalue (entry, newval); - } - } - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (entry, att_exported); - - if (exported_p (entry)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - return (entry); -} - -/* Bind a variable NAME to VALUE. This conses up the name - and value strings. If we have a temporary environment, we bind there - first, then we bind into shell_variables. */ - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable (name, value, flags) - const char *name; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc, *nvc; - int level; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - /* If we have a temporary environment, look there first for the variable, - and, if found, modify the value there before modifying it in the - shell_variables table. This allows sourced scripts to modify values - given to them in a temporary environment while modifying the variable - value that the caller sees. */ - if (temporary_env) - bind_tempenv_variable (name, value); - - /* XXX -- handle local variables here. */ - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - { - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) || vc_isbltnenv (vc)) - { - v = hash_lookup (name, vc->table); - nvc = vc; - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - nv = find_variable_nameref_context (v, vc, &nvc); - if (nv == 0) - { - nv = find_variable_last_nameref_context (v, vc, &nvc); - if (nv && nameref_p (nv)) - return (bind_variable_internal (nameref_cell (nv), value, nvc->table, 0, flags)); - else - v = nv; - } - else - v = nv; - } - if (v) - return (bind_variable_internal (v->name, value, nvc->table, 0, flags)); - } - } - /* bind_variable_internal will handle nameref resolution in this case */ - return (bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, 0, flags)); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_global_variable (name, value, flags) - const char *name; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc, *nvc; - int level; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - /* bind_variable_internal will handle nameref resolution in this case */ - return (bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, 0, flags)); -} - -/* Make VAR, a simple shell variable, have value VALUE. Once assigned a - value, variables are no longer invisible. This is a duplicate of part - of the internals of bind_variable. If the variable is exported, or - all modified variables should be exported, mark the variable for export - and note that the export environment needs to be recreated. */ -SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable_value (var, value, aflags) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - int aflags; -{ - char *t; - - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - - if (var->assign_func) - { - /* If we're appending, we need the old value, so use - make_variable_value */ - t = (aflags & ASS_APPEND) ? make_variable_value (var, value, aflags) : value; - (*(var->assign_func)) (var, t, -1, 0); - if (t != value && t) - free (t); - } - else - { - t = make_variable_value (var, value, aflags); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, t); - } - - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (var, att_exported); - - if (exported_p (var)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - return (var); -} - -/* Bind/create a shell variable with the name LHS to the RHS. - This creates or modifies a variable such that it is an integer. - - This used to be in expr.c, but it is here so that all of the - variable binding stuff is localized. Since we don't want any - recursive evaluation from bind_variable() (possible without this code, - since bind_variable() calls the evaluator for variables with the integer - attribute set), we temporarily turn off the integer attribute for each - variable we set here, then turn it back on after binding as necessary. */ - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_int_variable (lhs, rhs) - char *lhs, *rhs; -{ - register SHELL_VAR *v; - int isint, isarr, implicitarray; - - isint = isarr = implicitarray = 0; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (valid_array_reference (lhs)) - { - isarr = 1; - v = array_variable_part (lhs, (char **)0, (int *)0); - } - else -#endif - v = find_variable (lhs); - - if (v) - { - isint = integer_p (v); - VUNSETATTR (v, att_integer); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (array_p (v) && isarr == 0) - implicitarray = 1; -#endif - } - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (isarr) - v = assign_array_element (lhs, rhs, 0); - else if (implicitarray) - v = bind_array_variable (lhs, 0, rhs, 0); - else -#endif - v = bind_variable (lhs, rhs, 0); - - if (v && isint) - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - - return (v); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_var_to_int (var, val) - char *var; - intmax_t val; -{ - char ibuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND (intmax_t) + 1], *p; - - p = fmtulong (val, 10, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf), 0); - return (bind_int_variable (var, p)); -} - -/* Do a function binding to a variable. You pass the name and - the command to bind to. This conses the name and command. */ -SHELL_VAR * -bind_function (name, value) - const char *name; - COMMAND *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry == 0) - { - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), shell_functions, HASH_NOSRCH); - entry = new_shell_variable (name); - elt->data = (PTR_T)entry; - } - else - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - - if (var_isset (entry)) - dispose_command (function_cell (entry)); - - if (value) - var_setfunc (entry, copy_command (value)); - else - var_setfunc (entry, 0); - - VSETATTR (entry, att_function); - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (entry, att_exported); - - VUNSETATTR (entry, att_invisible); /* Just to be sure */ - - if (exported_p (entry)) - array_needs_making = 1; - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - set_itemlist_dirty (&it_functions); -#endif - - return (entry); -} - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -/* Bind a function definition, which includes source file and line number - information in addition to the command, into the FUNCTION_DEF hash table.*/ -void -bind_function_def (name, value) - const char *name; - FUNCTION_DEF *value; -{ - FUNCTION_DEF *entry; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - COMMAND *cmd; - - entry = find_function_def (name); - if (entry) - { - dispose_function_def_contents (entry); - entry = copy_function_def_contents (value, entry); - } - else - { - cmd = value->command; - value->command = 0; - entry = copy_function_def (value); - value->command = cmd; - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), shell_function_defs, HASH_NOSRCH); - elt->data = (PTR_T *)entry; - } -} -#endif /* DEBUGGER */ - -/* Add STRING, which is of the form foo=bar, to the temporary environment - HASH_TABLE (temporary_env). The functions in execute_cmd.c are - responsible for moving the main temporary env to one of the other - temporary environments. The expansion code in subst.c calls this. */ -int -assign_in_env (word, flags) - WORD_DESC *word; - int flags; -{ - int offset, aflags; - char *name, *temp, *value; - SHELL_VAR *var; - const char *string; - - string = word->word; - - aflags = 0; - offset = assignment (string, 0); - name = savestring (string); - value = (char *)NULL; - - if (name[offset] == '=') - { - name[offset] = 0; - - /* don't ignore the `+' when assigning temporary environment */ - if (name[offset - 1] == '+') - { - name[offset - 1] = '\0'; - aflags |= ASS_APPEND; - } - - var = find_variable (name); - if (var && (readonly_p (var) || noassign_p (var))) - { - if (readonly_p (var)) - err_readonly (name); - free (name); - return (0); - } - - temp = name + offset + 1; - value = expand_assignment_string_to_string (temp, 0); - - if (var && (aflags & ASS_APPEND)) - { - temp = make_variable_value (var, value, aflags); - FREE (value); - value = temp; - } - } - - if (temporary_env == 0) - temporary_env = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - - var = hash_lookup (name, temporary_env); - if (var == 0) - var = make_new_variable (name, temporary_env); - else - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - if (value == 0) - { - value = (char *)xmalloc (1); /* like do_assignment_internal */ - value[0] = '\0'; - } - - var_setvalue (var, value); - var->attributes |= (att_exported|att_tempvar); - var->context = variable_context; /* XXX */ - - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - var->exportstr = mk_env_string (name, value); - - array_needs_making = 1; - - if (flags) - stupidly_hack_special_variables (name); - - if (echo_command_at_execute) - /* The Korn shell prints the `+ ' in front of assignment statements, - so we do too. */ - xtrace_print_assignment (name, value, 0, 1); - - free (name); - return 1; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Copying variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -/* Copy VAR to a new data structure and return that structure. */ -SHELL_VAR * -copy_variable (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - SHELL_VAR *copy = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - if (var) - { - copy = (SHELL_VAR *)xmalloc (sizeof (SHELL_VAR)); - - copy->attributes = var->attributes; - copy->name = savestring (var->name); - - if (function_p (var)) - var_setfunc (copy, copy_command (function_cell (var))); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - var_setarray (copy, array_copy (array_cell (var))); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - var_setassoc (copy, assoc_copy (assoc_cell (var))); -#endif - else if (nameref_cell (var)) /* XXX - nameref */ - var_setref (copy, savestring (nameref_cell (var))); - else if (value_cell (var)) /* XXX - nameref */ - var_setvalue (copy, savestring (value_cell (var))); - else - var_setvalue (copy, (char *)NULL); - - copy->dynamic_value = var->dynamic_value; - copy->assign_func = var->assign_func; - - copy->exportstr = COPY_EXPORTSTR (var); - - copy->context = var->context; - } - return (copy); -} -#endif - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Deleting and unsetting variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Dispose of the information attached to VAR. */ -static void -dispose_variable_value (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (function_p (var)) - dispose_command (function_cell (var)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - array_dispose (array_cell (var)); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - assoc_dispose (assoc_cell (var)); -#endif - else if (nameref_p (var)) - FREE (nameref_cell (var)); - else - FREE (value_cell (var)); -} - -void -dispose_variable (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var == 0) - return; - - if (nofree_p (var) == 0) - dispose_variable_value (var); - - FREE_EXPORTSTR (var); - - free (var->name); - - if (exported_p (var)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - free (var); -} - -/* Unset the shell variable referenced by NAME. Unsetting a nameref variable - unsets the variable it resolves to but leaves the nameref alone. */ -int -unbind_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - int r; - - v = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - nv = (v && nameref_p (v)) ? find_variable_nameref (v) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - r = nv ? makunbound (nv->name, shell_variables) : makunbound (name, shell_variables); - return r; -} - -/* Unbind NAME, where NAME is assumed to be a nameref variable */ -int -unbind_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - return makunbound (name, shell_variables); - return 0; -} - -/* Unset the shell function named NAME. */ -int -unbind_func (name) - const char *name; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - SHELL_VAR *func; - - elt = hash_remove (name, shell_functions, 0); - - if (elt == 0) - return -1; - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - set_itemlist_dirty (&it_functions); -#endif - - func = (SHELL_VAR *)elt->data; - if (func) - { - if (exported_p (func)) - array_needs_making++; - dispose_variable (func); - } - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - return 0; -} - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -int -unbind_function_def (name) - const char *name; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - FUNCTION_DEF *funcdef; - - elt = hash_remove (name, shell_function_defs, 0); - - if (elt == 0) - return -1; - - funcdef = (FUNCTION_DEF *)elt->data; - if (funcdef) - dispose_function_def (funcdef); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - return 0; -} -#endif /* DEBUGGER */ - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME go away. HASH_LIST is the - hash table from which this variable should be deleted (either - shell_variables or shell_functions). - Returns non-zero if the variable couldn't be found. */ -int -makunbound (name, vc) - const char *name; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt, *new_elt; - SHELL_VAR *old_var; - VAR_CONTEXT *v; - char *t; - - for (elt = (BUCKET_CONTENTS *)NULL, v = vc; v; v = v->down) - if (elt = hash_remove (name, v->table, 0)) - break; - - if (elt == 0) - return (-1); - - old_var = (SHELL_VAR *)elt->data; - - if (old_var && exported_p (old_var)) - array_needs_making++; - - /* If we're unsetting a local variable and we're still executing inside - the function, just mark the variable as invisible. The function - eventually called by pop_var_context() will clean it up later. This - must be done so that if the variable is subsequently assigned a new - value inside the function, the `local' attribute is still present. - We also need to add it back into the correct hash table. */ - if (old_var && local_p (old_var) && variable_context == old_var->context) - { - if (nofree_p (old_var)) - var_setvalue (old_var, (char *)NULL); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (old_var)) - array_dispose (array_cell (old_var)); - else if (assoc_p (old_var)) - assoc_dispose (assoc_cell (old_var)); -#endif - else if (nameref_p (old_var)) - FREE (nameref_cell (old_var)); - else - FREE (value_cell (old_var)); - /* Reset the attributes. Preserve the export attribute if the variable - came from a temporary environment. Make sure it stays local, and - make it invisible. */ - old_var->attributes = (exported_p (old_var) && tempvar_p (old_var)) ? att_exported : 0; - VSETATTR (old_var, att_local); - VSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - var_setvalue (old_var, (char *)NULL); - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (old_var); - - new_elt = hash_insert (savestring (old_var->name), v->table, 0); - new_elt->data = (PTR_T)old_var; - stupidly_hack_special_variables (old_var->name); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - return (0); - } - - /* Have to save a copy of name here, because it might refer to - old_var->name. If so, stupidly_hack_special_variables will - reference freed memory. */ - t = savestring (name); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - dispose_variable (old_var); - stupidly_hack_special_variables (t); - free (t); - - return (0); -} - -/* Get rid of all of the variables in the current context. */ -void -kill_all_local_variables () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - if (vc == 0) - return; /* XXX */ - - if (vc->table && vc_haslocals (vc)) - { - delete_all_variables (vc->table); - hash_dispose (vc->table); - } - vc->table = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; -} - -static void -free_variable_hash_data (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - dispose_variable (var); -} - -/* Delete the entire contents of the hash table. */ -void -delete_all_variables (hashed_vars) - HASH_TABLE *hashed_vars; -{ - hash_flush (hashed_vars, free_variable_hash_data); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Setting variable attributes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#define FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE(name, entry) \ - do \ - { \ - entry = find_variable (name); \ - if (!entry) \ - { \ - entry = bind_variable (name, "", 0); \ - if (!no_invisible_vars && entry) entry->attributes |= att_invisible; \ - } \ - } \ - while (0) - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME be readonly. - If NAME does not exist yet, create it. */ -void -set_var_read_only (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE (name, entry); - VSETATTR (entry, att_readonly); -} - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -/* Make the function associated with NAME be readonly. - If NAME does not exist, we just punt, like auto_export code below. */ -void -set_func_read_only (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry) - VSETATTR (entry, att_readonly); -} - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME be auto-exported. - If NAME does not exist yet, create it. */ -void -set_var_auto_export (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE (name, entry); - set_auto_export (entry); -} - -/* Make the function associated with NAME be auto-exported. */ -void -set_func_auto_export (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry) - set_auto_export (entry); -} -#endif - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating lists of variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static VARLIST * -vlist_alloc (nentries) - int nentries; -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - - vlist = (VARLIST *)xmalloc (sizeof (VARLIST)); - vlist->list = (SHELL_VAR **)xmalloc ((nentries + 1) * sizeof (SHELL_VAR *)); - vlist->list_size = nentries; - vlist->list_len = 0; - vlist->list[0] = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - return vlist; -} - -static VARLIST * -vlist_realloc (vlist, n) - VARLIST *vlist; - int n; -{ - if (vlist == 0) - return (vlist = vlist_alloc (n)); - if (n > vlist->list_size) - { - vlist->list_size = n; - vlist->list = (SHELL_VAR **)xrealloc (vlist->list, (vlist->list_size + 1) * sizeof (SHELL_VAR *)); - } - return vlist; -} - -static void -vlist_add (vlist, var, flags) - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR *var; - int flags; -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 0; i < vlist->list_len; i++) - if (STREQ (var->name, vlist->list[i]->name)) - break; - if (i < vlist->list_len) - return; - - if (i >= vlist->list_size) - vlist = vlist_realloc (vlist, vlist->list_size + 16); - - vlist->list[vlist->list_len++] = var; - vlist->list[vlist->list_len] = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; -} - -/* Map FUNCTION over the variables in VAR_HASH_TABLE. Return an array of the - variables for which FUNCTION returns a non-zero value. A NULL value - for FUNCTION means to use all variables. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -map_over (function, vc) - sh_var_map_func_t *function; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *v; - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - int nentries; - - for (nentries = 0, v = vc; v; v = v->down) - nentries += HASH_ENTRIES (v->table); - - if (nentries == 0) - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - - vlist = vlist_alloc (nentries); - - for (v = vc; v; v = v->down) - flatten (v->table, function, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - return ret; -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -map_over_funcs (function) - sh_var_map_func_t *function; -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - - if (shell_functions == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions) == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR **)NULL); - - vlist = vlist_alloc (HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions)); - - flatten (shell_functions, function, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - return ret; -} - -/* Flatten VAR_HASH_TABLE, applying FUNC to each member and adding those - elements for which FUNC succeeds to VLIST->list. FLAGS is reserved - for future use. Only unique names are added to VLIST. If FUNC is - NULL, each variable in VAR_HASH_TABLE is added to VLIST. If VLIST is - NULL, FUNC is applied to each SHELL_VAR in VAR_HASH_TABLE. If VLIST - and FUNC are both NULL, nothing happens. */ -static void -flatten (var_hash_table, func, vlist, flags) - HASH_TABLE *var_hash_table; - sh_var_map_func_t *func; - VARLIST *vlist; - int flags; -{ - register int i; - register BUCKET_CONTENTS *tlist; - int r; - SHELL_VAR *var; - - if (var_hash_table == 0 || (HASH_ENTRIES (var_hash_table) == 0) || (vlist == 0 && func == 0)) - return; - - for (i = 0; i < var_hash_table->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (tlist = hash_items (i, var_hash_table); tlist; tlist = tlist->next) - { - var = (SHELL_VAR *)tlist->data; - - r = func ? (*func) (var) : 1; - if (r && vlist) - vlist_add (vlist, var, flags); - } - } -} - -void -sort_variables (array) - SHELL_VAR **array; -{ - qsort (array, strvec_len ((char **)array), sizeof (SHELL_VAR *), (QSFUNC *)qsort_var_comp); -} - -static int -qsort_var_comp (var1, var2) - SHELL_VAR **var1, **var2; -{ - int result; - - if ((result = (*var1)->name[0] - (*var2)->name[0]) == 0) - result = strcmp ((*var1)->name, (*var2)->name); - - return (result); -} - -/* Apply FUNC to each variable in SHELL_VARIABLES, adding each one for - which FUNC succeeds to an array of SHELL_VAR *s. Returns the array. */ -static SHELL_VAR ** -vapply (func) - sh_var_map_func_t *func; -{ - SHELL_VAR **list; - - list = map_over (func, shell_variables); - if (list /* && posixly_correct */) - sort_variables (list); - return (list); -} - -/* Apply FUNC to each variable in SHELL_FUNCTIONS, adding each one for - which FUNC succeeds to an array of SHELL_VAR *s. Returns the array. */ -static SHELL_VAR ** -fapply (func) - sh_var_map_func_t *func; -{ - SHELL_VAR **list; - - list = map_over_funcs (func); - if (list /* && posixly_correct */) - sort_variables (list); - return (list); -} - -/* Create a NULL terminated array of all the shell variables. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -all_shell_variables () -{ - return (vapply ((sh_var_map_func_t *)NULL)); -} - -/* Create a NULL terminated array of all the shell functions. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -all_shell_functions () -{ - return (fapply ((sh_var_map_func_t *)NULL)); -} - -static int -visible_var (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_visible_functions () -{ - return (fapply (visible_var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_visible_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_var)); -} - -/* Return non-zero if the variable VAR is visible and exported. Array - variables cannot be exported. */ -static int -visible_and_exported (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && exported_p (var)); -} - -/* Candidate variables for the export environment are either valid variables - with the export attribute or invalid variables inherited from the initial - environment and simply passed through. */ -static int -export_environment_candidate (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (exported_p (var) && (invisible_p (var) == 0 || imported_p (var))); -} - -/* Return non-zero if VAR is a local variable in the current context and - is exported. */ -static int -local_and_exported (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && local_p (var) && var->context == variable_context && exported_p (var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_exported_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_and_exported)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -local_exported_variables () -{ - return (vapply (local_and_exported)); -} - -static int -variable_in_context (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && local_p (var) && var->context == variable_context); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_local_variables () -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = shell_variables; - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - - if (vc == 0) - { - internal_error (_("all_local_variables: no function context at current scope")); - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - } - if (vc->table == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table) == 0 || vc_haslocals (vc) == 0) - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - - vlist = vlist_alloc (HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table)); - - flatten (vc->table, variable_in_context, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - if (ret) - sort_variables (ret); - return ret; -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* Return non-zero if the variable VAR is visible and an array. */ -static int -visible_array_vars (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && array_p (var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_array_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_array_vars)); -} -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -char ** -all_variables_matching_prefix (prefix) - const char *prefix; -{ - SHELL_VAR **varlist; - char **rlist; - int vind, rind, plen; - - plen = STRLEN (prefix); - varlist = all_visible_variables (); - for (vind = 0; varlist && varlist[vind]; vind++) - ; - if (varlist == 0 || vind == 0) - return ((char **)NULL); - rlist = strvec_create (vind + 1); - for (vind = rind = 0; varlist[vind]; vind++) - { - if (plen == 0 || STREQN (prefix, varlist[vind]->name, plen)) - rlist[rind++] = savestring (varlist[vind]->name); - } - rlist[rind] = (char *)0; - free (varlist); - - return rlist; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Managing temporary variable scopes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Make variable NAME have VALUE in the temporary environment. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_tempenv_variable (name, value) - const char *name; - char *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = temporary_env ? hash_lookup (name, temporary_env) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - if (var) - { - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, savestring (value)); - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - } - - return (var); -} - -/* Find a variable in the temporary environment that is named NAME. - Return the SHELL_VAR *, or NULL if not found. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_tempenv_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - return (temporary_env ? hash_lookup (name, temporary_env) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -char **tempvar_list; -int tvlist_ind; - -/* Push the variable described by (SHELL_VAR *)DATA down to the next - variable context from the temporary environment. */ -static void -push_temp_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - HASH_TABLE *binding_table; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - binding_table = shell_variables->table; - if (binding_table == 0) - { - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - /* shouldn't happen */ - binding_table = shell_variables->table = global_variables->table = hash_create (0); - else - binding_table = shell_variables->table = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - } - - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), binding_table, 0, 0); - - /* XXX - should we set the context here? It shouldn't matter because of how - assign_in_env works, but might want to check. */ - if (binding_table == global_variables->table) /* XXX */ - var->attributes &= ~(att_tempvar|att_propagate); - else - { - var->attributes |= att_propagate; - if (binding_table == shell_variables->table) - shell_variables->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - } - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - - if (find_special_var (var->name) >= 0) - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind++] = savestring (var->name); - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -static void -propagate_temp_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - if (tempvar_p (var) && (var->attributes & att_propagate)) - push_temp_var (data); - else - { - if (find_special_var (var->name) >= 0) - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind++] = savestring (var->name); - dispose_variable (var); - } -} - -/* Free the storage used in the hash table for temporary - environment variables. PUSHF is a function to be called - to free each hash table entry. It takes care of pushing variables - to previous scopes if appropriate. PUSHF stores names of variables - that require special handling (e.g., IFS) on tempvar_list, so this - function can call stupidly_hack_special_variables on all the - variables in the list when the temporary hash table is destroyed. */ -static void -dispose_temporary_env (pushf) - sh_free_func_t *pushf; -{ - int i; - - tempvar_list = strvec_create (HASH_ENTRIES (temporary_env) + 1); - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind = 0] = 0; - - hash_flush (temporary_env, pushf); - hash_dispose (temporary_env); - temporary_env = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind] = 0; - - array_needs_making = 1; - -#if 0 - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now -- check setifs in assign_in_env */ -#endif - for (i = 0; i < tvlist_ind; i++) - stupidly_hack_special_variables (tempvar_list[i]); - - strvec_dispose (tempvar_list); - tempvar_list = 0; - tvlist_ind = 0; -} - -void -dispose_used_env_vars () -{ - if (temporary_env) - { - dispose_temporary_env (propagate_temp_var); - maybe_make_export_env (); - } -} - -/* Take all of the shell variables in the temporary environment HASH_TABLE - and make shell variables from them at the current variable context. */ -void -merge_temporary_env () -{ - if (temporary_env) - dispose_temporary_env (push_temp_var); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating and manipulating the environment */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static inline char * -mk_env_string (name, value) - const char *name, *value; -{ - int name_len, value_len; - char *p; - - name_len = strlen (name); - value_len = STRLEN (value); - p = (char *)xmalloc (2 + name_len + value_len); - strcpy (p, name); - p[name_len] = '='; - if (value && *value) - strcpy (p + name_len + 1, value); - else - p[name_len + 1] = '\0'; - return (p); -} - -#ifdef DEBUG -/* Debugging */ -static int -valid_exportstr (v) - SHELL_VAR *v; -{ - char *s; - - s = v->exportstr; - if (s == 0) - { - internal_error (_("%s has null exportstr"), v->name); - return (0); - } - if (legal_variable_starter ((unsigned char)*s) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("invalid character %d in exportstr for %s"), *s, v->name); - return (0); - } - for (s = v->exportstr + 1; s && *s; s++) - { - if (*s == '=') - break; - if (legal_variable_char ((unsigned char)*s) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("invalid character %d in exportstr for %s"), *s, v->name); - return (0); - } - } - if (*s != '=') - { - internal_error (_("no `=' in exportstr for %s"), v->name); - return (0); - } - return (1); -} -#endif - -static char ** -make_env_array_from_var_list (vars) - SHELL_VAR **vars; -{ - register int i, list_index; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - char **list, *value; - - list = strvec_create ((1 + strvec_len ((char **)vars))); - -#define USE_EXPORTSTR (value == var->exportstr) - - for (i = 0, list_index = 0; var = vars[i]; i++) - { -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) - /* We don't use the exportstr stuff on Cygwin at all. */ - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); -#endif - if (var->exportstr) - value = var->exportstr; - else if (function_p (var)) - value = named_function_string ((char *)NULL, function_cell (var), 0); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) -# if ARRAY_EXPORT - value = array_to_assignment_string (array_cell (var)); -# else - continue; /* XXX array vars cannot yet be exported */ -# endif /* ARRAY_EXPORT */ - else if (assoc_p (var)) -# if 0 - value = assoc_to_assignment_string (assoc_cell (var)); -# else - continue; /* XXX associative array vars cannot yet be exported */ -# endif -#endif - else - value = value_cell (var); - - if (value) - { - /* Gee, I'd like to get away with not using savestring() if we're - using the cached exportstr... */ - list[list_index] = USE_EXPORTSTR ? savestring (value) - : mk_env_string (var->name, value); - - if (USE_EXPORTSTR == 0) - SAVE_EXPORTSTR (var, list[list_index]); - - list_index++; -#undef USE_EXPORTSTR - -#if 0 /* not yet */ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (array_p (var) || assoc_p (var)) - free (value); -#endif -#endif - } - } - - list[list_index] = (char *)NULL; - return (list); -} - -/* Make an array of assignment statements from the hash table - HASHED_VARS which contains SHELL_VARs. Only visible, exported - variables are eligible. */ -static char ** -make_var_export_array (vcxt) - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt; -{ - char **list; - SHELL_VAR **vars; - -#if 0 - vars = map_over (visible_and_exported, vcxt); -#else - vars = map_over (export_environment_candidate, vcxt); -#endif - - if (vars == 0) - return (char **)NULL; - - list = make_env_array_from_var_list (vars); - - free (vars); - return (list); -} - -static char ** -make_func_export_array () -{ - char **list; - SHELL_VAR **vars; - - vars = map_over_funcs (visible_and_exported); - if (vars == 0) - return (char **)NULL; - - list = make_env_array_from_var_list (vars); - - free (vars); - return (list); -} - -/* Add ENVSTR to the end of the exported environment, EXPORT_ENV. */ -#define add_to_export_env(envstr,do_alloc) \ -do \ - { \ - if (export_env_index >= (export_env_size - 1)) \ - { \ - export_env_size += 16; \ - export_env = strvec_resize (export_env, export_env_size); \ - environ = export_env; \ - } \ - export_env[export_env_index++] = (do_alloc) ? savestring (envstr) : envstr; \ - export_env[export_env_index] = (char *)NULL; \ - } while (0) - -/* Add ASSIGN to EXPORT_ENV, or supercede a previous assignment in the - array with the same left-hand side. Return the new EXPORT_ENV. */ -char ** -add_or_supercede_exported_var (assign, do_alloc) - char *assign; - int do_alloc; -{ - register int i; - int equal_offset; - - equal_offset = assignment (assign, 0); - if (equal_offset == 0) - return (export_env); - - /* If this is a function, then only supersede the function definition. - We do this by including the `=() {' in the comparison, like - initialize_shell_variables does. */ - if (assign[equal_offset + 1] == '(' && - strncmp (assign + equal_offset + 2, ") {", 3) == 0) /* } */ - equal_offset += 4; - - for (i = 0; i < export_env_index; i++) - { - if (STREQN (assign, export_env[i], equal_offset + 1)) - { - free (export_env[i]); - export_env[i] = do_alloc ? savestring (assign) : assign; - return (export_env); - } - } - add_to_export_env (assign, do_alloc); - return (export_env); -} - -static void -add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, do_alloc, do_supercede) - char **temp_array; - int do_alloc, do_supercede; -{ - register int i; - - if (temp_array == 0) - return; - - for (i = 0; temp_array[i]; i++) - { - if (do_supercede) - export_env = add_or_supercede_exported_var (temp_array[i], do_alloc); - else - add_to_export_env (temp_array[i], do_alloc); - } - - free (temp_array); -} - -/* Make the environment array for the command about to be executed, if the - array needs making. Otherwise, do nothing. If a shell action could - change the array that commands receive for their environment, then the - code should `array_needs_making++'. - - The order to add to the array is: - temporary_env - list of var contexts whose head is shell_variables - shell_functions - - This is the shell variable lookup order. We add only new variable - names at each step, which allows local variables and variables in - the temporary environments to shadow variables in the global (or - any previous) scope. -*/ - -static int -n_shell_variables () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - int n; - - for (n = 0, vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - n += HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table); - return n; -} - -int -chkexport (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v && exported_p (v)) - { - array_needs_making = 1; - maybe_make_export_env (); - return 1; - } - return 0; -} - -void -maybe_make_export_env () -{ - register char **temp_array; - int new_size; - VAR_CONTEXT *tcxt; - - if (array_needs_making) - { - if (export_env) - strvec_flush (export_env); - - /* Make a guess based on how many shell variables and functions we - have. Since there will always be array variables, and array - variables are not (yet) exported, this will always be big enough - for the exported variables and functions. */ - new_size = n_shell_variables () + HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions) + 1 + - HASH_ENTRIES (temporary_env); - if (new_size > export_env_size) - { - export_env_size = new_size; - export_env = strvec_resize (export_env, export_env_size); - environ = export_env; - } - export_env[export_env_index = 0] = (char *)NULL; - - /* Make a dummy variable context from the temporary_env, stick it on - the front of shell_variables, call make_var_export_array on the - whole thing to flatten it, and convert the list of SHELL_VAR *s - to the form needed by the environment. */ - if (temporary_env) - { - tcxt = new_var_context ((char *)NULL, 0); - tcxt->table = temporary_env; - tcxt->down = shell_variables; - } - else - tcxt = shell_variables; - - temp_array = make_var_export_array (tcxt); - if (temp_array) - add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, 0, 0); - - if (tcxt != shell_variables) - free (tcxt); - -#if defined (RESTRICTED_SHELL) - /* Restricted shells may not export shell functions. */ - temp_array = restricted ? (char **)0 : make_func_export_array (); -#else - temp_array = make_func_export_array (); -#endif - if (temp_array) - add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, 0, 0); - - array_needs_making = 0; - } -} - -/* This is an efficiency hack. PWD and OLDPWD are auto-exported, so - we will need to remake the exported environment every time we - change directories. `_' is always put into the environment for - every external command, so without special treatment it will always - cause the environment to be remade. - - If there is no other reason to make the exported environment, we can - just update the variables in place and mark the exported environment - as no longer needing a remake. */ -void -update_export_env_inplace (env_prefix, preflen, value) - char *env_prefix; - int preflen; - char *value; -{ - char *evar; - - evar = (char *)xmalloc (STRLEN (value) + preflen + 1); - strcpy (evar, env_prefix); - if (value) - strcpy (evar + preflen, value); - export_env = add_or_supercede_exported_var (evar, 0); -} - -/* We always put _ in the environment as the name of this command. */ -void -put_command_name_into_env (command_name) - char *command_name; -{ - update_export_env_inplace ("_=", 2, command_name); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Managing variable contexts */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Allocate and return a new variable context with NAME and FLAGS. - NAME can be NULL. */ - -VAR_CONTEXT * -new_var_context (name, flags) - char *name; - int flags; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = (VAR_CONTEXT *)xmalloc (sizeof (VAR_CONTEXT)); - vc->name = name ? savestring (name) : (char *)NULL; - vc->scope = variable_context; - vc->flags = flags; - - vc->up = vc->down = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - vc->table = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - - return vc; -} - -/* Free a variable context and its data, including the hash table. Dispose - all of the variables. */ -void -dispose_var_context (vc) - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - FREE (vc->name); - - if (vc->table) - { - delete_all_variables (vc->table); - hash_dispose (vc->table); - } - - free (vc); -} - -/* Set VAR's scope level to the current variable context. */ -static int -set_context (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (var->context = variable_context); -} - -/* Make a new variable context with NAME and FLAGS and a HASH_TABLE of - temporary variables, and push it onto shell_variables. This is - for shell functions. */ -VAR_CONTEXT * -push_var_context (name, flags, tempvars) - char *name; - int flags; - HASH_TABLE *tempvars; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = new_var_context (name, flags); - vc->table = tempvars; - if (tempvars) - { - /* Have to do this because the temp environment was created before - variable_context was incremented. */ - flatten (tempvars, set_context, (VARLIST *)NULL, 0); - vc->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - } - vc->down = shell_variables; - shell_variables->up = vc; - - return (shell_variables = vc); -} - -static void -push_func_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - if (tempvar_p (var) && (posixly_correct || (var->attributes & att_propagate))) - { - /* Make sure we have a hash table to store the variable in while it is - being propagated down to the global variables table. Create one if - we have to */ - if ((vc_isfuncenv (shell_variables) || vc_istempenv (shell_variables)) && shell_variables->table == 0) - shell_variables->table = hash_create (0); - /* XXX - should we set v->context here? */ - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), shell_variables->table, 0, 0); - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - var->attributes &= ~(att_tempvar|att_propagate); - else - shell_variables->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - } - else - stupidly_hack_special_variables (var->name); /* XXX */ - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -/* Pop the top context off of VCXT and dispose of it, returning the rest of - the stack. */ -void -pop_var_context () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *ret, *vcxt; - - vcxt = shell_variables; - if (vc_isfuncenv (vcxt) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("pop_var_context: head of shell_variables not a function context")); - return; - } - - if (ret = vcxt->down) - { - ret->up = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - shell_variables = ret; - if (vcxt->table) - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_func_var); - dispose_var_context (vcxt); - } - else - internal_error (_("pop_var_context: no global_variables context")); -} - -/* Delete the HASH_TABLEs for all variable contexts beginning at VCXT, and - all of the VAR_CONTEXTs except GLOBAL_VARIABLES. */ -void -delete_all_contexts (vcxt) - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *v, *t; - - for (v = vcxt; v != global_variables; v = t) - { - t = v->down; - dispose_var_context (v); - } - - delete_all_variables (global_variables->table); - shell_variables = global_variables; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Pushing and Popping temporary variable scopes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -VAR_CONTEXT * -push_scope (flags, tmpvars) - int flags; - HASH_TABLE *tmpvars; -{ - return (push_var_context ((char *)NULL, flags, tmpvars)); -} - -static void -push_exported_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - /* If a temp var had its export attribute set, or it's marked to be - propagated, bind it in the previous scope before disposing it. */ - /* XXX - This isn't exactly right, because all tempenv variables have the - export attribute set. */ -#if 0 - if (exported_p (var) || (var->attributes & att_propagate)) -#else - if (tempvar_p (var) && exported_p (var) && (var->attributes & att_propagate)) -#endif - { - var->attributes &= ~att_tempvar; /* XXX */ - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), shell_variables->table, 0, 0); - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - var->attributes &= ~att_propagate; - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - } - else - stupidly_hack_special_variables (var->name); /* XXX */ - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -void -pop_scope (is_special) - int is_special; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt, *ret; - - vcxt = shell_variables; - if (vc_istempscope (vcxt) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("pop_scope: head of shell_variables not a temporary environment scope")); - return; - } - - ret = vcxt->down; - if (ret) - ret->up = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - - shell_variables = ret; - - /* Now we can take care of merging variables in VCXT into set of scopes - whose head is RET (shell_variables). */ - FREE (vcxt->name); - if (vcxt->table) - { - if (is_special) - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_func_var); - else - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_exported_var); - hash_dispose (vcxt->table); - } - free (vcxt); - - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now */ -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Pushing and Popping function contexts */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static WORD_LIST **dollar_arg_stack = (WORD_LIST **)NULL; -static int dollar_arg_stack_slots; -static int dollar_arg_stack_index; - -/* XXX - we might want to consider pushing and popping the `getopts' state - when we modify the positional parameters. */ -void -push_context (name, is_subshell, tempvars) - char *name; /* function name */ - int is_subshell; - HASH_TABLE *tempvars; -{ - if (is_subshell == 0) - push_dollar_vars (); - variable_context++; - push_var_context (name, VC_FUNCENV, tempvars); -} - -/* Only called when subshell == 0, so we don't need to check, and can - unconditionally pop the dollar vars off the stack. */ -void -pop_context () -{ - pop_dollar_vars (); - variable_context--; - pop_var_context (); - - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now */ -} - -/* Save the existing positional parameters on a stack. */ -void -push_dollar_vars () -{ - if (dollar_arg_stack_index + 2 > dollar_arg_stack_slots) - { - dollar_arg_stack = (WORD_LIST **) - xrealloc (dollar_arg_stack, (dollar_arg_stack_slots += 10) - * sizeof (WORD_LIST *)); - } - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index++] = list_rest_of_args (); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; -} - -/* Restore the positional parameters from our stack. */ -void -pop_dollar_vars () -{ - if (!dollar_arg_stack || dollar_arg_stack_index == 0) - return; - - remember_args (dollar_arg_stack[--dollar_arg_stack_index], 1); - dispose_words (dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index]); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - set_dollar_vars_unchanged (); -} - -void -dispose_saved_dollar_vars () -{ - if (!dollar_arg_stack || dollar_arg_stack_index == 0) - return; - - dispose_words (dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index]); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; -} - -/* Manipulate the special BASH_ARGV and BASH_ARGC variables. */ - -void -push_args (list) - WORD_LIST *list; -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) && defined (DEBUGGER) - SHELL_VAR *bash_argv_v, *bash_argc_v; - ARRAY *bash_argv_a, *bash_argc_a; - WORD_LIST *l; - arrayind_t i; - char *t; - - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGV", bash_argv_v, bash_argv_a); - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGC", bash_argc_v, bash_argc_a); - - for (l = list, i = 0; l; l = l->next, i++) - array_push (bash_argv_a, l->word->word); - - t = itos (i); - array_push (bash_argc_a, t); - free (t); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS && DEBUGGER */ -} - -/* Remove arguments from BASH_ARGV array. Pop top element off BASH_ARGC - array and use that value as the count of elements to remove from - BASH_ARGV. */ -void -pop_args () -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) && defined (DEBUGGER) - SHELL_VAR *bash_argv_v, *bash_argc_v; - ARRAY *bash_argv_a, *bash_argc_a; - ARRAY_ELEMENT *ce; - intmax_t i; - - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGV", bash_argv_v, bash_argv_a); - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGC", bash_argc_v, bash_argc_a); - - ce = array_shift (bash_argc_a, 1, 0); - if (ce == 0 || legal_number (element_value (ce), &i) == 0) - i = 0; - - for ( ; i > 0; i--) - array_pop (bash_argv_a); - array_dispose_element (ce); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS && DEBUGGER */ -} - -/************************************************* - * * - * Functions to manage special variables * - * * - *************************************************/ - -/* Extern declarations for variables this code has to manage. */ -extern int eof_encountered, eof_encountered_limit, ignoreeof; - -#if defined (READLINE) -extern int hostname_list_initialized; -#endif - -/* An alist of name.function for each special variable. Most of the - functions don't do much, and in fact, this would be faster with a - switch statement, but by the end of this file, I am sick of switch - statements. */ - -#define SET_INT_VAR(name, intvar) intvar = find_variable (name) != 0 - -/* This table will be sorted with qsort() the first time it's accessed. */ -struct name_and_function { - char *name; - sh_sv_func_t *function; -}; - -static struct name_and_function special_vars[] = { - { "BASH_COMPAT", sv_shcompat }, - { "BASH_XTRACEFD", sv_xtracefd }, - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - { "CHILD_MAX", sv_childmax }, -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -# if defined (STRICT_POSIX) - { "COLUMNS", sv_winsize }, -# endif - { "COMP_WORDBREAKS", sv_comp_wordbreaks }, -#endif - - { "FUNCNEST", sv_funcnest }, - - { "GLOBIGNORE", sv_globignore }, - -#if defined (HISTORY) - { "HISTCONTROL", sv_history_control }, - { "HISTFILESIZE", sv_histsize }, - { "HISTIGNORE", sv_histignore }, - { "HISTSIZE", sv_histsize }, - { "HISTTIMEFORMAT", sv_histtimefmt }, -#endif - -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) - { "HOME", sv_home }, -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) - { "HOSTFILE", sv_hostfile }, -#endif - - { "IFS", sv_ifs }, - { "IGNOREEOF", sv_ignoreeof }, - - { "LANG", sv_locale }, - { "LC_ALL", sv_locale }, - { "LC_COLLATE", sv_locale }, - { "LC_CTYPE", sv_locale }, - { "LC_MESSAGES", sv_locale }, - { "LC_NUMERIC", sv_locale }, - { "LC_TIME", sv_locale }, - -#if defined (READLINE) && defined (STRICT_POSIX) - { "LINES", sv_winsize }, -#endif - - { "MAIL", sv_mail }, - { "MAILCHECK", sv_mail }, - { "MAILPATH", sv_mail }, - - { "OPTERR", sv_opterr }, - { "OPTIND", sv_optind }, - - { "PATH", sv_path }, - { "POSIXLY_CORRECT", sv_strict_posix }, - -#if defined (READLINE) - { "TERM", sv_terminal }, - { "TERMCAP", sv_terminal }, - { "TERMINFO", sv_terminal }, -#endif /* READLINE */ - - { "TEXTDOMAIN", sv_locale }, - { "TEXTDOMAINDIR", sv_locale }, - -#if defined (HAVE_TZSET) - { "TZ", sv_tz }, -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) && defined (BANG_HISTORY) - { "histchars", sv_histchars }, -#endif /* HISTORY && BANG_HISTORY */ - - { "ignoreeof", sv_ignoreeof }, - - { (char *)0, (sh_sv_func_t *)0 } -}; - -#define N_SPECIAL_VARS (sizeof (special_vars) / sizeof (special_vars[0]) - 1) - -static int -sv_compare (sv1, sv2) - struct name_and_function *sv1, *sv2; -{ - int r; - - if ((r = sv1->name[0] - sv2->name[0]) == 0) - r = strcmp (sv1->name, sv2->name); - return r; -} - -static inline int -find_special_var (name) - const char *name; -{ - register int i, r; - - for (i = 0; special_vars[i].name; i++) - { - r = special_vars[i].name[0] - name[0]; - if (r == 0) - r = strcmp (special_vars[i].name, name); - if (r == 0) - return i; - else if (r > 0) - /* Can't match any of rest of elements in sorted list. Take this out - if it causes problems in certain environments. */ - break; - } - return -1; -} - -/* The variable in NAME has just had its state changed. Check to see if it - is one of the special ones where something special happens. */ -void -stupidly_hack_special_variables (name) - char *name; -{ - static int sv_sorted = 0; - int i; - - if (sv_sorted == 0) /* shouldn't need, but it's fairly cheap. */ - { - qsort (special_vars, N_SPECIAL_VARS, sizeof (special_vars[0]), - (QSFUNC *)sv_compare); - sv_sorted = 1; - } - - i = find_special_var (name); - if (i != -1) - (*(special_vars[i].function)) (name); -} - -/* Special variables that need hooks to be run when they are unset as part - of shell reinitialization should have their sv_ functions run here. */ -void -reinit_special_variables () -{ -#if defined (READLINE) - sv_comp_wordbreaks ("COMP_WORDBREAKS"); -#endif - sv_globignore ("GLOBIGNORE"); - sv_opterr ("OPTERR"); -} - -void -sv_ifs (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("IFS"); - setifs (v); -} - -/* What to do just after the PATH variable has changed. */ -void -sv_path (name) - char *name; -{ - /* hash -r */ - phash_flush (); -} - -/* What to do just after one of the MAILxxxx variables has changed. NAME - is the name of the variable. This is called with NAME set to one of - MAIL, MAILCHECK, or MAILPATH. */ -void -sv_mail (name) - char *name; -{ - /* If the time interval for checking the files has changed, then - reset the mail timer. Otherwise, one of the pathname vars - to the users mailbox has changed, so rebuild the array of - filenames. */ - if (name[4] == 'C') /* if (strcmp (name, "MAILCHECK") == 0) */ - reset_mail_timer (); - else - { - free_mail_files (); - remember_mail_dates (); - } -} - -void -sv_funcnest (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - intmax_t num; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - funcnest_max = 0; - else if (legal_number (value_cell (v), &num) == 0) - funcnest_max = 0; - else - funcnest_max = num; -} - -/* What to do when GLOBIGNORE changes. */ -void -sv_globignore (name) - char *name; -{ - if (privileged_mode == 0) - setup_glob_ignore (name); -} - -#if defined (READLINE) -void -sv_comp_wordbreaks (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *sv; - - sv = find_variable (name); - if (sv == 0) - reset_completer_word_break_chars (); -} - -/* What to do just after one of the TERMxxx variables has changed. - If we are an interactive shell, then try to reset the terminal - information in readline. */ -void -sv_terminal (name) - char *name; -{ - if (interactive_shell && no_line_editing == 0) - rl_reset_terminal (get_string_value ("TERM")); -} - -void -sv_hostfile (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - clear_hostname_list (); - else - hostname_list_initialized = 0; -} - -#if defined (STRICT_POSIX) -/* In strict posix mode, we allow assignments to LINES and COLUMNS (and values - found in the initial environment) to override the terminal size reported by - the kernel. */ -void -sv_winsize (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - intmax_t xd; - int d; - - if (posixly_correct == 0 || interactive_shell == 0 || no_line_editing) - return; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0 || var_isnull (v)) - rl_reset_screen_size (); - else - { - if (legal_number (value_cell (v), &xd) == 0) - return; - winsize_assignment = 1; - d = xd; /* truncate */ - if (name[0] == 'L') /* LINES */ - rl_set_screen_size (d, -1); - else /* COLUMNS */ - rl_set_screen_size (-1, d); - winsize_assignment = 0; - } -} -#endif /* STRICT_POSIX */ -#endif /* READLINE */ - -/* Update the value of HOME in the export environment so tilde expansion will - work on cygwin. */ -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) -sv_home (name) - char *name; -{ - array_needs_making = 1; - maybe_make_export_env (); -} -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) -/* What to do after the HISTSIZE or HISTFILESIZE variables change. - If there is a value for this HISTSIZE (and it is numeric), then stifle - the history. Otherwise, if there is NO value for this variable, - unstifle the history. If name is HISTFILESIZE, and its value is - numeric, truncate the history file to hold no more than that many - lines. */ -void -sv_histsize (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - intmax_t num; - int hmax; - - temp = get_string_value (name); - - if (temp && *temp) - { - if (legal_number (temp, &num)) - { - hmax = num; - if (hmax < 0 && name[4] == 'S') - unstifle_history (); /* unstifle history if HISTSIZE < 0 */ - else if (name[4] == 'S') - { - stifle_history (hmax); - hmax = where_history (); - if (history_lines_this_session > hmax) - history_lines_this_session = hmax; - } - else if (hmax >= 0) /* truncate HISTFILE if HISTFILESIZE >= 0 */ - { - history_truncate_file (get_string_value ("HISTFILE"), hmax); - if (hmax <= history_lines_in_file) - history_lines_in_file = hmax; - } - } - } - else if (name[4] == 'S') - unstifle_history (); -} - -/* What to do after the HISTIGNORE variable changes. */ -void -sv_histignore (name) - char *name; -{ - setup_history_ignore (name); -} - -/* What to do after the HISTCONTROL variable changes. */ -void -sv_history_control (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - char *val; - int tptr; - - history_control = 0; - temp = get_string_value (name); - - if (temp == 0 || *temp == 0) - return; - - tptr = 0; - while (val = extract_colon_unit (temp, &tptr)) - { - if (STREQ (val, "ignorespace")) - history_control |= HC_IGNSPACE; - else if (STREQ (val, "ignoredups")) - history_control |= HC_IGNDUPS; - else if (STREQ (val, "ignoreboth")) - history_control |= HC_IGNBOTH; - else if (STREQ (val, "erasedups")) - history_control |= HC_ERASEDUPS; - - free (val); - } -} - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* Setting/unsetting of the history expansion character. */ -void -sv_histchars (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - - temp = get_string_value (name); - if (temp) - { - history_expansion_char = *temp; - if (temp[0] && temp[1]) - { - history_subst_char = temp[1]; - if (temp[2]) - history_comment_char = temp[2]; - } - } - else - { - history_expansion_char = '!'; - history_subst_char = '^'; - history_comment_char = '#'; - } -} -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ - -void -sv_histtimefmt (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - if (v = find_variable (name)) - { - if (history_comment_char == 0) - history_comment_char = '#'; - } - history_write_timestamps = (v != 0); -} -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (HAVE_TZSET) -void -sv_tz (name) - char *name; -{ - if (chkexport (name)) - tzset (); -} -#endif - -/* If the variable exists, then the value of it can be the number - of times we actually ignore the EOF. The default is small, - (smaller than csh, anyway). */ -void -sv_ignoreeof (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *tmp_var; - char *temp; - - eof_encountered = 0; - - tmp_var = find_variable (name); - ignoreeof = tmp_var != 0; - temp = tmp_var ? value_cell (tmp_var) : (char *)NULL; - if (temp) - eof_encountered_limit = (*temp && all_digits (temp)) ? atoi (temp) : 10; - set_shellopts (); /* make sure `ignoreeof' is/is not in $SHELLOPTS */ -} - -void -sv_optind (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - int s; - - tt = get_string_value ("OPTIND"); - if (tt && *tt) - { - s = atoi (tt); - - /* According to POSIX, setting OPTIND=1 resets the internal state - of getopt (). */ - if (s < 0 || s == 1) - s = 0; - } - else - s = 0; - getopts_reset (s); -} - -void -sv_opterr (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - - tt = get_string_value ("OPTERR"); - sh_opterr = (tt && *tt) ? atoi (tt) : 1; -} - -void -sv_strict_posix (name) - char *name; -{ - SET_INT_VAR (name, posixly_correct); - posix_initialize (posixly_correct); -#if defined (READLINE) - if (interactive_shell) - posix_readline_initialize (posixly_correct); -#endif /* READLINE */ - set_shellopts (); /* make sure `posix' is/is not in $SHELLOPTS */ -} - -void -sv_locale (name) - char *name; -{ - char *v; - int r; - - v = get_string_value (name); - if (name[0] == 'L' && name[1] == 'A') /* LANG */ - r = set_lang (name, v); - else - r = set_locale_var (name, v); /* LC_*, TEXTDOMAIN* */ - -#if 1 - if (r == 0 && posixly_correct) - last_command_exit_value = 1; -#endif -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -void -set_pipestatus_array (ps, nproc) - int *ps; - int nproc; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a; - ARRAY_ELEMENT *ae; - register int i; - char *t, tbuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (v == 0) - v = make_new_array_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (array_p (v) == 0) - return; /* Do nothing if not an array variable. */ - a = array_cell (v); - - if (a == 0 || array_num_elements (a) == 0) - { - for (i = 0; i < nproc; i++) /* was ps[i] != -1, not i < nproc */ - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - return; - } - - /* Fast case */ - if (array_num_elements (a) == nproc && nproc == 1) - { - ae = element_forw (a->head); - free (element_value (ae)); - ae->value = itos (ps[0]); - } - else if (array_num_elements (a) <= nproc) - { - /* modify in array_num_elements members in place, then add */ - ae = a->head; - for (i = 0; i < array_num_elements (a); i++) - { - ae = element_forw (ae); - free (element_value (ae)); - ae->value = itos (ps[i]); - } - /* add any more */ - for ( ; i < nproc; i++) - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - } - else - { - /* deleting elements. it's faster to rebuild the array. */ - array_flush (a); - for (i = 0; ps[i] != -1; i++) - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - } -} - -ARRAY * -save_pipestatus_array () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a, *a2; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (v == 0 || array_p (v) == 0 || array_cell (v) == 0) - return ((ARRAY *)NULL); - - a = array_cell (v); - a2 = array_copy (array_cell (v)); - - return a2; -} - -void -restore_pipestatus_array (a) - ARRAY *a; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a2; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - /* XXX - should we still assign even if existing value is NULL? */ - if (v == 0 || array_p (v) == 0 || array_cell (v) == 0) - return; - - a2 = array_cell (v); - var_setarray (v, a); - - array_dispose (a2); -} -#endif - -void -set_pipestatus_from_exit (s) - int s; -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - static int v[2] = { 0, -1 }; - - v[0] = s; - set_pipestatus_array (v, 1); -#endif -} - -void -sv_xtracefd (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - char *t, *e; - int fd; - FILE *fp; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - { - xtrace_reset (); - return; - } - - t = value_cell (v); - if (t == 0 || *t == 0) - xtrace_reset (); - else - { - fd = (int)strtol (t, &e, 10); - if (e != t && *e == '\0' && sh_validfd (fd)) - { - fp = fdopen (fd, "w"); - if (fp == 0) - internal_error (_("%s: %s: cannot open as FILE"), name, value_cell (v)); - else - xtrace_set (fd, fp); - } - else - internal_error (_("%s: %s: invalid value for trace file descriptor"), name, value_cell (v)); - } -} - -#define MIN_COMPAT_LEVEL 31 - -void -sv_shcompat (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - char *val; - int tens, ones, compatval; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - { - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - val = value_cell (v); - if (val == 0 || *val == '\0') - { - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - /* Handle decimal-like compatibility version specifications: 4.2 */ - if (isdigit (val[0]) && val[1] == '.' && isdigit (val[2]) && val[3] == 0) - { - tens = val[0] - '0'; - ones = val[2] - '0'; - compatval = tens*10 + ones; - } - /* Handle integer-like compatibility version specifications: 42 */ - else if (isdigit (val[0]) && isdigit (val[1]) && val[2] == 0) - { - tens = val[0] - '0'; - ones = val[1] - '0'; - compatval = tens*10 + ones; - } - else - { -compat_error: - internal_error (_("%s: %s: compatibility value out of range"), name, val); - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - - if (compatval < MIN_COMPAT_LEVEL || compatval > DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL) - goto compat_error; - - shell_compatibility_level = compatval; - set_compatibility_opts (); -} - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) -void -sv_childmax (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - int s; - - tt = get_string_value (name); - s = (tt && *tt) ? atoi (tt) : 0; - set_maxchild (s); -} -#endif diff --git a/variables.c~ b/variables.c~ deleted file mode 100644 index f4ff851a8..000000000 --- a/variables.c~ +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5286 +0,0 @@ -/* variables.c -- Functions for hacking shell variables. */ - -/* Copyright (C) 1987-2013 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 3 of the License, 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. If not, see . -*/ - -#include "config.h" - -#include "bashtypes.h" -#include "posixstat.h" -#include "posixtime.h" - -#if defined (__QNX__) -# if defined (__QNXNTO__) -# include -# else -# include -# endif /* !__QNXNTO__ */ -#endif /* __QNX__ */ - -#if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) -# include -#endif - -#include -#include "chartypes.h" -#if defined (HAVE_PWD_H) -# include -#endif -#include "bashansi.h" -#include "bashintl.h" - -#define NEED_XTRACE_SET_DECL - -#include "shell.h" -#include "flags.h" -#include "execute_cmd.h" -#include "findcmd.h" -#include "mailcheck.h" -#include "input.h" -#include "hashcmd.h" -#include "pathexp.h" -#include "alias.h" -#include "jobs.h" - -#include "version.h" - -#include "builtins/getopt.h" -#include "builtins/common.h" -#include "builtins/builtext.h" - -#if defined (READLINE) -# include "bashline.h" -# include -#else -# include -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) -# include "bashhist.h" -# include -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) -# include "pcomplete.h" -#endif - -#define TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS 4 /* must be power of two */ - -#define ifsname(s) ((s)[0] == 'I' && (s)[1] == 'F' && (s)[2] == 'S' && (s)[3] == '\0') - -extern char **environ; - -/* Variables used here and defined in other files. */ -extern int posixly_correct; -extern int line_number, line_number_base; -extern int subshell_environment, indirection_level, subshell_level; -extern int build_version, patch_level; -extern int expanding_redir; -extern int last_command_exit_value; -extern char *dist_version, *release_status; -extern char *shell_name; -extern char *primary_prompt, *secondary_prompt; -extern char *current_host_name; -extern sh_builtin_func_t *this_shell_builtin; -extern SHELL_VAR *this_shell_function; -extern char *the_printed_command_except_trap; -extern char *this_command_name; -extern char *command_execution_string; -extern time_t shell_start_time; -extern int assigning_in_environment; -extern int executing_builtin; -extern int funcnest_max; - -#if defined (READLINE) -extern int no_line_editing; -extern int perform_hostname_completion; -#endif - -/* The list of shell variables that the user has created at the global - scope, or that came from the environment. */ -VAR_CONTEXT *global_variables = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - -/* The current list of shell variables, including function scopes */ -VAR_CONTEXT *shell_variables = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - -/* The list of shell functions that the user has created, or that came from - the environment. */ -HASH_TABLE *shell_functions = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -/* The table of shell function definitions that the user defined or that - came from the environment. */ -HASH_TABLE *shell_function_defs = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; -#endif - -/* The current variable context. This is really a count of how deep into - executing functions we are. */ -int variable_context = 0; - -/* The set of shell assignments which are made only in the environment - for a single command. */ -HASH_TABLE *temporary_env = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - -/* Set to non-zero if an assignment error occurs while putting variables - into the temporary environment. */ -int tempenv_assign_error; - -/* Some funky variables which are known about specially. Here is where - "$*", "$1", and all the cruft is kept. */ -char *dollar_vars[10]; -WORD_LIST *rest_of_args = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - -/* The value of $$. */ -pid_t dollar_dollar_pid; - -/* Non-zero means that we have to remake EXPORT_ENV. */ -int array_needs_making = 1; - -/* The number of times BASH has been executed. This is set - by initialize_variables (). */ -int shell_level = 0; - -/* An array which is passed to commands as their environment. It is - manufactured from the union of the initial environment and the - shell variables that are marked for export. */ -char **export_env = (char **)NULL; -static int export_env_index; -static int export_env_size; - -#if defined (READLINE) -static int winsize_assignment; /* currently assigning to LINES or COLUMNS */ -#endif - -static HASH_TABLE *last_table_searched; /* hash_lookup sets this */ - -/* Some forward declarations. */ -static void create_variable_tables __P((void)); - -static void set_machine_vars __P((void)); -static void set_home_var __P((void)); -static void set_shell_var __P((void)); -static char *get_bash_name __P((void)); -static void initialize_shell_level __P((void)); -static void uidset __P((void)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static void make_vers_array __P((void)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *null_assign __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *null_array_assign __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#endif -static SHELL_VAR *get_self __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *init_dynamic_array_var __P((char *, sh_var_value_func_t *, sh_var_assign_func_t *, int)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_dynamic_assoc_var __P((char *, sh_var_value_func_t *, sh_var_assign_func_t *, int)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_seconds __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_seconds __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_seconds_var __P((void)); - -static int brand __P((void)); -static void sbrand __P((unsigned long)); /* set bash random number generator. */ -static void seedrand __P((void)); /* seed generator randomly */ -static SHELL_VAR *assign_random __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_random __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_lineno __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_lineno __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *assign_subshell __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_subshell __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *get_bashpid __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -#if defined (HISTORY) -static SHELL_VAR *get_histcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -static SHELL_VAR *get_comp_wordbreaks __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_comp_wordbreaks __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -#endif - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *assign_dirstack __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_dirstack __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR *get_groupset __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static SHELL_VAR *build_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_hashcmd __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -# if defined (ALIAS) -static SHELL_VAR *build_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *get_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *assign_aliasvar __P((SHELL_VAR *, char *, arrayind_t, char *)); -# endif -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *get_funcname __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static SHELL_VAR *init_funcname_var __P((void)); - -static void initialize_dynamic_variables __P((void)); - -static SHELL_VAR *hash_lookup __P((const char *, HASH_TABLE *)); -static SHELL_VAR *new_shell_variable __P((const char *)); -static SHELL_VAR *make_new_variable __P((const char *, HASH_TABLE *)); -static SHELL_VAR *bind_variable_internal __P((const char *, char *, HASH_TABLE *, int, int)); - -static void dispose_variable_value __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static void free_variable_hash_data __P((PTR_T)); - -static VARLIST *vlist_alloc __P((int)); -static VARLIST *vlist_realloc __P((VARLIST *, int)); -static void vlist_add __P((VARLIST *, SHELL_VAR *, int)); - -static void flatten __P((HASH_TABLE *, sh_var_map_func_t *, VARLIST *, int)); - -static int qsort_var_comp __P((SHELL_VAR **, SHELL_VAR **)); - -static SHELL_VAR **vapply __P((sh_var_map_func_t *)); -static SHELL_VAR **fapply __P((sh_var_map_func_t *)); - -static int visible_var __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int visible_and_exported __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int export_environment_candidate __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int local_and_exported __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -static int variable_in_context __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static int visible_array_vars __P((SHELL_VAR *)); -#endif - -static SHELL_VAR *find_nameref_at_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *)); -static SHELL_VAR *find_variable_nameref_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *, VAR_CONTEXT **)); -static SHELL_VAR *find_variable_last_nameref_context __P((SHELL_VAR *, VAR_CONTEXT *, VAR_CONTEXT **)); - -static SHELL_VAR *bind_tempenv_variable __P((const char *, char *)); -static void push_temp_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void propagate_temp_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void dispose_temporary_env __P((sh_free_func_t *)); - -static inline char *mk_env_string __P((const char *, const char *)); -static char **make_env_array_from_var_list __P((SHELL_VAR **)); -static char **make_var_export_array __P((VAR_CONTEXT *)); -static char **make_func_export_array __P((void)); -static void add_temp_array_to_env __P((char **, int, int)); - -static int n_shell_variables __P((void)); -static int set_context __P((SHELL_VAR *)); - -static void push_func_var __P((PTR_T)); -static void push_exported_var __P((PTR_T)); - -static inline int find_special_var __P((const char *)); - -static void -create_variable_tables () -{ - if (shell_variables == 0) - { - shell_variables = global_variables = new_var_context ((char *)NULL, 0); - shell_variables->scope = 0; - shell_variables->table = hash_create (0); - } - - if (shell_functions == 0) - shell_functions = hash_create (0); - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) - if (shell_function_defs == 0) - shell_function_defs = hash_create (0); -#endif -} - -/* Initialize the shell variables from the current environment. - If PRIVMODE is nonzero, don't import functions from ENV or - parse $SHELLOPTS. */ -void -initialize_shell_variables (env, privmode) - char **env; - int privmode; -{ - char *name, *string, *temp_string; - int c, char_index, string_index, string_length, ro; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - create_variable_tables (); - - for (string_index = 0; string = env[string_index++]; ) - { - char_index = 0; - name = string; - while ((c = *string++) && c != '=') - ; - if (string[-1] == '=') - char_index = string - name - 1; - - /* If there are weird things in the environment, like `=xxx' or a - string without an `=', just skip them. */ - if (char_index == 0) - continue; - - /* ASSERT(name[char_index] == '=') */ - name[char_index] = '\0'; - /* Now, name = env variable name, string = env variable value, and - char_index == strlen (name) */ - - temp_var = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - /* If exported function, define it now. Don't import functions from - the environment in privileged mode. */ - if (privmode == 0 && read_but_dont_execute == 0 && STREQN ("() {", string, 4)) - { - string_length = strlen (string); - temp_string = (char *)xmalloc (3 + string_length + char_index); - - strcpy (temp_string, name); - temp_string[char_index] = ' '; - strcpy (temp_string + char_index + 1, string); - - if (posixly_correct == 0 || legal_identifier (name)) - parse_and_execute (temp_string, name, SEVAL_NONINT|SEVAL_NOHIST); - - /* Ancient backwards compatibility. Old versions of bash exported - functions like name()=() {...} */ - if (name[char_index - 1] == ')' && name[char_index - 2] == '(') - name[char_index - 2] = '\0'; - - if (temp_var = find_function (name)) - { - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported|att_imported)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - else - { - if (temp_var = bind_variable (name, string, 0)) - { - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported | att_invisible)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - last_command_exit_value = 1; - report_error (_("error importing function definition for `%s'"), name); - } - - /* ( */ - if (name[char_index - 1] == ')' && name[char_index - 2] == '\0') - name[char_index - 2] = '('; /* ) */ - } -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -# if ARRAY_EXPORT - /* Array variables may not yet be exported. */ - else if (*string == '(' && string[1] == '[' && string[strlen (string) - 1] == ')') - { - string_length = 1; - temp_string = extract_array_assignment_list (string, &string_length); - temp_var = assign_array_from_string (name, temp_string); - FREE (temp_string); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported)); - array_needs_making = 1; - } -# endif /* ARRAY_EXPORT */ -#endif -#if 0 - else if (legal_identifier (name)) -#else - else -#endif - { - ro = 0; - if (posixly_correct && STREQ (name, "SHELLOPTS")) - { - temp_var = find_variable ("SHELLOPTS"); - ro = temp_var && readonly_p (temp_var); - if (temp_var) - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_readonly); - } - temp_var = bind_variable (name, string, 0); - if (temp_var) - { - if (legal_identifier (name)) - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported)); - else - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_imported | att_invisible)); - if (ro) - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_readonly); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - } - - name[char_index] = '='; - /* temp_var can be NULL if it was an exported function with a syntax - error (a different bug, but it still shouldn't dump core). */ - if (temp_var && function_p (temp_var) == 0) /* XXX not yet */ - { - CACHE_IMPORTSTR (temp_var, name); - } - } - - set_pwd (); - - /* Set up initial value of $_ */ - temp_var = set_if_not ("_", dollar_vars[0]); - - /* Remember this pid. */ - dollar_dollar_pid = getpid (); - - /* Now make our own defaults in case the vars that we think are - important are missing. */ - temp_var = set_if_not ("PATH", DEFAULT_PATH_VALUE); -#if 0 - set_auto_export (temp_var); /* XXX */ -#endif - - temp_var = set_if_not ("TERM", "dumb"); -#if 0 - set_auto_export (temp_var); /* XXX */ -#endif - -#if defined (__QNX__) - /* set node id -- don't import it from the environment */ - { - char node_name[22]; -# if defined (__QNXNTO__) - netmgr_ndtostr(ND2S_LOCAL_STR, ND_LOCAL_NODE, node_name, sizeof(node_name)); -# else - qnx_nidtostr (getnid (), node_name, sizeof (node_name)); -# endif - temp_var = bind_variable ("NODE", node_name, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - } -#endif - - /* set up the prompts. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { -#if defined (PROMPT_STRING_DECODE) - set_if_not ("PS1", primary_prompt); -#else - if (current_user.uid == -1) - get_current_user_info (); - set_if_not ("PS1", current_user.euid == 0 ? "# " : primary_prompt); -#endif - set_if_not ("PS2", secondary_prompt); - } - set_if_not ("PS4", "+ "); - - /* Don't allow IFS to be imported from the environment. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("IFS", " \t\n", 0); - setifs (temp_var); - - /* Magic machine types. Pretty convenient. */ - set_machine_vars (); - - /* Default MAILCHECK for interactive shells. Defer the creation of a - default MAILPATH until the startup files are read, because MAIL - names a mail file if MAILPATH is not set, and we should provide a - default only if neither is set. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { - temp_var = set_if_not ("MAILCHECK", posixly_correct ? "600" : "60"); - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_integer); - } - - /* Do some things with shell level. */ - initialize_shell_level (); - - set_ppid (); - - /* Initialize the `getopts' stuff. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("OPTIND", "1", 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_integer); - getopts_reset (0); - bind_variable ("OPTERR", "1", 0); - sh_opterr = 1; - - if (login_shell == 1 && posixly_correct == 0) - set_home_var (); - - /* Get the full pathname to THIS shell, and set the BASH variable - to it. */ - name = get_bash_name (); - temp_var = bind_variable ("BASH", name, 0); - free (name); - - /* Make the exported environment variable SHELL be the user's login - shell. Note that the `tset' command looks at this variable - to determine what style of commands to output; if it ends in "csh", - then C-shell commands are output, else Bourne shell commands. */ - set_shell_var (); - - /* Make a variable called BASH_VERSION which contains the version info. */ - bind_variable ("BASH_VERSION", shell_version_string (), 0); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - make_vers_array (); -#endif - - if (command_execution_string) - bind_variable ("BASH_EXECUTION_STRING", command_execution_string, 0); - - /* Find out if we're supposed to be in Posix.2 mode via an - environment variable. */ - temp_var = find_variable ("POSIXLY_CORRECT"); - if (!temp_var) - temp_var = find_variable ("POSIX_PEDANTIC"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_strict_posix (temp_var->name); - -#if defined (HISTORY) - /* Set history variables to defaults, and then do whatever we would - do if the variable had just been set. Do this only in the case - that we are remembering commands on the history list. */ - if (remember_on_history) - { - name = bash_tilde_expand (posixly_correct ? "~/.sh_history" : "~/.bash_history", 0); - - set_if_not ("HISTFILE", name); - free (name); - } -#endif /* HISTORY */ - - /* Seed the random number generator. */ - seedrand (); - - /* Handle some "special" variables that we may have inherited from a - parent shell. */ - if (interactive_shell) - { - temp_var = find_variable ("IGNOREEOF"); - if (!temp_var) - temp_var = find_variable ("ignoreeof"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_ignoreeof (temp_var->name); - } - -#if defined (HISTORY) - if (interactive_shell && remember_on_history) - { - sv_history_control ("HISTCONTROL"); - sv_histignore ("HISTIGNORE"); - sv_histtimefmt ("HISTTIMEFORMAT"); - } -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (READLINE) && defined (STRICT_POSIX) - /* POSIXLY_CORRECT will only be 1 here if the shell was compiled - -DSTRICT_POSIX */ - if (interactive_shell && posixly_correct && no_line_editing == 0) - rl_prefer_env_winsize = 1; -#endif /* READLINE && STRICT_POSIX */ - - /* - * 24 October 2001 - * - * I'm tired of the arguing and bug reports. Bash now leaves SSH_CLIENT - * and SSH2_CLIENT alone. I'm going to rely on the shell_level check in - * isnetconn() to avoid running the startup files more often than wanted. - * That will, of course, only work if the user's login shell is bash, so - * I've made that behavior conditional on SSH_SOURCE_BASHRC being defined - * in config-top.h. - */ -#if 0 - temp_var = find_variable ("SSH_CLIENT"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - { - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - } - temp_var = find_variable ("SSH2_CLIENT"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - { - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); - array_needs_making = 1; - } -#endif - - /* Get the user's real and effective user ids. */ - uidset (); - - temp_var = find_variable ("BASH_XTRACEFD"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var)) - sv_xtracefd (temp_var->name); - - /* Initialize the dynamic variables, and seed their values. */ - initialize_dynamic_variables (); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Setting values for special shell variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static void -set_machine_vars () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = set_if_not ("HOSTTYPE", HOSTTYPE); - temp_var = set_if_not ("OSTYPE", OSTYPE); - temp_var = set_if_not ("MACHTYPE", MACHTYPE); - - temp_var = set_if_not ("HOSTNAME", current_host_name); -} - -/* Set $HOME to the information in the password file if we didn't get - it from the environment. */ - -/* This function is not static so the tilde and readline libraries can - use it. */ -char * -sh_get_home_dir () -{ - if (current_user.home_dir == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - return current_user.home_dir; -} - -static void -set_home_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = find_variable ("HOME"); - if (temp_var == 0) - temp_var = bind_variable ("HOME", sh_get_home_dir (), 0); -#if 0 - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); -#endif -} - -/* Set $SHELL to the user's login shell if it is not already set. Call - get_current_user_info if we haven't already fetched the shell. */ -static void -set_shell_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - temp_var = find_variable ("SHELL"); - if (temp_var == 0) - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - temp_var = bind_variable ("SHELL", current_user.shell, 0); - } -#if 0 - VSETATTR (temp_var, att_exported); -#endif -} - -static char * -get_bash_name () -{ - char *name; - - if ((login_shell == 1) && RELPATH(shell_name)) - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - name = savestring (current_user.shell); - } - else if (ABSPATH(shell_name)) - name = savestring (shell_name); - else if (shell_name[0] == '.' && shell_name[1] == '/') - { - /* Fast path for common case. */ - char *cdir; - int len; - - cdir = get_string_value ("PWD"); - if (cdir) - { - len = strlen (cdir); - name = (char *)xmalloc (len + strlen (shell_name) + 1); - strcpy (name, cdir); - strcpy (name + len, shell_name + 1); - } - else - name = savestring (shell_name); - } - else - { - char *tname; - int s; - - tname = find_user_command (shell_name); - - if (tname == 0) - { - /* Try the current directory. If there is not an executable - there, just punt and use the login shell. */ - s = file_status (shell_name); - if (s & FS_EXECABLE) - { - tname = make_absolute (shell_name, get_string_value ("PWD")); - if (*shell_name == '.') - { - name = sh_canonpath (tname, PATH_CHECKDOTDOT|PATH_CHECKEXISTS); - if (name == 0) - name = tname; - else - free (tname); - } - else - name = tname; - } - else - { - if (current_user.shell == 0) - get_current_user_info (); - name = savestring (current_user.shell); - } - } - else - { - name = full_pathname (tname); - free (tname); - } - } - - return (name); -} - -void -adjust_shell_level (change) - int change; -{ - char new_level[5], *old_SHLVL; - intmax_t old_level; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - old_SHLVL = get_string_value ("SHLVL"); - if (old_SHLVL == 0 || *old_SHLVL == '\0' || legal_number (old_SHLVL, &old_level) == 0) - old_level = 0; - - shell_level = old_level + change; - if (shell_level < 0) - shell_level = 0; - else if (shell_level > 1000) - { - internal_warning (_("shell level (%d) too high, resetting to 1"), shell_level); - shell_level = 1; - } - - /* We don't need the full generality of itos here. */ - if (shell_level < 10) - { - new_level[0] = shell_level + '0'; - new_level[1] = '\0'; - } - else if (shell_level < 100) - { - new_level[0] = (shell_level / 10) + '0'; - new_level[1] = (shell_level % 10) + '0'; - new_level[2] = '\0'; - } - else if (shell_level < 1000) - { - new_level[0] = (shell_level / 100) + '0'; - old_level = shell_level % 100; - new_level[1] = (old_level / 10) + '0'; - new_level[2] = (old_level % 10) + '0'; - new_level[3] = '\0'; - } - - temp_var = bind_variable ("SHLVL", new_level, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); -} - -static void -initialize_shell_level () -{ - adjust_shell_level (1); -} - -/* If we got PWD from the environment, update our idea of the current - working directory. In any case, make sure that PWD exists before - checking it. It is possible for getcwd () to fail on shell startup, - and in that case, PWD would be undefined. If this is an interactive - login shell, see if $HOME is the current working directory, and if - that's not the same string as $PWD, set PWD=$HOME. */ - -void -set_pwd () -{ - SHELL_VAR *temp_var, *home_var; - char *temp_string, *home_string; - - home_var = find_variable ("HOME"); - home_string = home_var ? value_cell (home_var) : (char *)NULL; - - temp_var = find_variable ("PWD"); - if (temp_var && imported_p (temp_var) && - (temp_string = value_cell (temp_var)) && - same_file (temp_string, ".", (struct stat *)NULL, (struct stat *)NULL)) - set_working_directory (temp_string); - else if (home_string && interactive_shell && login_shell && - same_file (home_string, ".", (struct stat *)NULL, (struct stat *)NULL)) - { - set_working_directory (home_string); - temp_var = bind_variable ("PWD", home_string, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - } - else - { - temp_string = get_working_directory ("shell-init"); - if (temp_string) - { - temp_var = bind_variable ("PWD", temp_string, 0); - set_auto_export (temp_var); - free (temp_string); - } - } - - /* According to the Single Unix Specification, v2, $OLDPWD is an - `environment variable' and therefore should be auto-exported. - Make a dummy invisible variable for OLDPWD, and mark it as exported. */ - temp_var = bind_variable ("OLDPWD", (char *)NULL, 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_exported | att_invisible)); -} - -/* Make a variable $PPID, which holds the pid of the shell's parent. */ -void -set_ppid () -{ - char namebuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(pid_t) + 1], *name; - SHELL_VAR *temp_var; - - name = inttostr (getppid (), namebuf, sizeof(namebuf)); - temp_var = find_variable ("PPID"); - if (temp_var) - VUNSETATTR (temp_var, (att_readonly | att_exported)); - temp_var = bind_variable ("PPID", name, 0); - VSETATTR (temp_var, (att_readonly | att_integer)); -} - -static void -uidset () -{ - char buff[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(uid_t) + 1], *b; - register SHELL_VAR *v; - - b = inttostr (current_user.uid, buff, sizeof (buff)); - v = find_variable ("UID"); - if (v == 0) - { - v = bind_variable ("UID", b, 0); - VSETATTR (v, (att_readonly | att_integer)); - } - - if (current_user.euid != current_user.uid) - b = inttostr (current_user.euid, buff, sizeof (buff)); - - v = find_variable ("EUID"); - if (v == 0) - { - v = bind_variable ("EUID", b, 0); - VSETATTR (v, (att_readonly | att_integer)); - } -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static void -make_vers_array () -{ - SHELL_VAR *vv; - ARRAY *av; - char *s, d[32], b[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - unbind_variable ("BASH_VERSINFO"); - - vv = make_new_array_variable ("BASH_VERSINFO"); - av = array_cell (vv); - strcpy (d, dist_version); - s = strchr (d, '.'); - if (s) - *s++ = '\0'; - array_insert (av, 0, d); - array_insert (av, 1, s); - s = inttostr (patch_level, b, sizeof (b)); - array_insert (av, 2, s); - s = inttostr (build_version, b, sizeof (b)); - array_insert (av, 3, s); - array_insert (av, 4, release_status); - array_insert (av, 5, MACHTYPE); - - VSETATTR (vv, att_readonly); -} -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -/* Set the environment variables $LINES and $COLUMNS in response to - a window size change. */ -void -sh_set_lines_and_columns (lines, cols) - int lines, cols; -{ - char val[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1], *v; - -#if defined (READLINE) - /* If we are currently assigning to LINES or COLUMNS, don't do anything. */ - if (winsize_assignment) - return; -#endif - - v = inttostr (lines, val, sizeof (val)); - bind_variable ("LINES", v, 0); - - v = inttostr (cols, val, sizeof (val)); - bind_variable ("COLUMNS", v, 0); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Printing variables and values */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Print LIST (a list of shell variables) to stdout in such a way that - they can be read back in. */ -void -print_var_list (list) - register SHELL_VAR **list; -{ - register int i; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - - for (i = 0; list && (var = list[i]); i++) - if (invisible_p (var) == 0) - print_assignment (var); -} - -/* Print LIST (a list of shell functions) to stdout in such a way that - they can be read back in. */ -void -print_func_list (list) - register SHELL_VAR **list; -{ - register int i; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - - for (i = 0; list && (var = list[i]); i++) - { - printf ("%s ", var->name); - print_var_function (var); - printf ("\n"); - } -} - -/* Print the value of a single SHELL_VAR. No newline is - output, but the variable is printed in such a way that - it can be read back in. */ -void -print_assignment (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var_isset (var) == 0) - return; - - if (function_p (var)) - { - printf ("%s", var->name); - print_var_function (var); - printf ("\n"); - } -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - print_array_assignment (var, 0); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - print_assoc_assignment (var, 0); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - else - { - printf ("%s=", var->name); - print_var_value (var, 1); - printf ("\n"); - } -} - -/* Print the value cell of VAR, a shell variable. Do not print - the name, nor leading/trailing newline. If QUOTE is non-zero, - and the value contains shell metacharacters, quote the value - in such a way that it can be read back in. */ -void -print_var_value (var, quote) - SHELL_VAR *var; - int quote; -{ - char *t; - - if (var_isset (var) == 0) - return; - - if (quote && posixly_correct == 0 && ansic_shouldquote (value_cell (var))) - { - t = ansic_quote (value_cell (var), 0, (int *)0); - printf ("%s", t); - free (t); - } - else if (quote && sh_contains_shell_metas (value_cell (var))) - { - t = sh_single_quote (value_cell (var)); - printf ("%s", t); - free (t); - } - else - printf ("%s", value_cell (var)); -} - -/* Print the function cell of VAR, a shell variable. Do not - print the name, nor leading/trailing newline. */ -void -print_var_function (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *x; - - if (function_p (var) && var_isset (var)) - { - x = named_function_string ((char *)NULL, function_cell(var), FUNC_MULTILINE|FUNC_EXTERNAL); - printf ("%s", x); - } -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Dynamic Variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* DYNAMIC VARIABLES - - These are variables whose values are generated anew each time they are - referenced. These are implemented using a pair of function pointers - in the struct variable: assign_func, which is called from bind_variable - and, if arrays are compiled into the shell, some of the functions in - arrayfunc.c, and dynamic_value, which is called from find_variable. - - assign_func is called from bind_variable_internal, if - bind_variable_internal discovers that the variable being assigned to - has such a function. The function is called as - SHELL_VAR *temp = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, value, ind) - and the (SHELL_VAR *)temp is returned as the value of bind_variable. It - is usually ENTRY (self). IND is an index for an array variable, and - unused otherwise. - - dynamic_value is called from find_variable_internal to return a `new' - value for the specified dynamic varible. If this function is NULL, - the variable is treated as a `normal' shell variable. If it is not, - however, then this function is called like this: - tempvar = (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var); - - Sometimes `tempvar' will replace the value of `var'. Other times, the - shell will simply use the string value. Pretty object-oriented, huh? - - Be warned, though: if you `unset' a special variable, it loses its - special meaning, even if you subsequently set it. - - The special assignment code would probably have been better put in - subst.c: do_assignment_internal, in the same style as - stupidly_hack_special_variables, but I wanted the changes as - localized as possible. */ - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR(var, val, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = bind_variable (var, (val), 0); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR(var, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = make_new_array_variable (var); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -#define INIT_DYNAMIC_ASSOC_VAR(var, gfunc, afunc) \ - do \ - { \ - v = make_new_assoc_variable (var); \ - v->dynamic_value = gfunc; \ - v->assign_func = afunc; \ - } \ - while (0) - -static SHELL_VAR * -null_assign (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - return (self); -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR * -null_array_assign (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - return (self); -} -#endif - -/* Degenerate `dynamic_value' function; just returns what's passed without - manipulation. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_self (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - return (self); -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* A generic dynamic array variable initializer. Intialize array variable - NAME with dynamic value function GETFUNC and assignment function SETFUNC. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -init_dynamic_array_var (name, getfunc, setfunc, attrs) - char *name; - sh_var_value_func_t *getfunc; - sh_var_assign_func_t *setfunc; - int attrs; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v) - return (v); - INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR (name, getfunc, setfunc); - if (attrs) - VSETATTR (v, attrs); - return v; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_dynamic_assoc_var (name, getfunc, setfunc, attrs) - char *name; - sh_var_value_func_t *getfunc; - sh_var_assign_func_t *setfunc; - int attrs; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v) - return (v); - INIT_DYNAMIC_ASSOC_VAR (name, getfunc, setfunc); - if (attrs) - VSETATTR (v, attrs); - return v; -} -#endif - -/* The value of $SECONDS. This is the number of seconds since shell - invocation, or, the number of seconds since the last assignment + the - value of the last assignment. */ -static intmax_t seconds_value_assigned; - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_seconds (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - if (legal_number (value, &seconds_value_assigned) == 0) - seconds_value_assigned = 0; - shell_start_time = NOW; - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_seconds (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - time_t time_since_start; - char *p; - - time_since_start = NOW - shell_start_time; - p = itos(seconds_value_assigned + time_since_start); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - VSETATTR (var, att_integer); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_seconds_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("SECONDS"); - if (v) - { - if (legal_number (value_cell(v), &seconds_value_assigned) == 0) - seconds_value_assigned = 0; - } - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("SECONDS", (v ? value_cell (v) : (char *)NULL), get_seconds, assign_seconds); - return v; -} - -/* The random number seed. You can change this by setting RANDOM. */ -static unsigned long rseed = 1; -static int last_random_value; -static int seeded_subshell = 0; - -/* A linear congruential random number generator based on the example - one in the ANSI C standard. This one isn't very good, but a more - complicated one is overkill. */ - -/* Returns a pseudo-random number between 0 and 32767. */ -static int -brand () -{ - /* From "Random number generators: good ones are hard to find", - Park and Miller, Communications of the ACM, vol. 31, no. 10, - October 1988, p. 1195. filtered through FreeBSD */ - long h, l; - - /* Can't seed with 0. */ - if (rseed == 0) - rseed = 123459876; - h = rseed / 127773; - l = rseed % 127773; - rseed = 16807 * l - 2836 * h; -#if 0 - if (rseed < 0) - rseed += 0x7fffffff; -#endif - return ((unsigned int)(rseed & 32767)); /* was % 32768 */ -} - -/* Set the random number generator seed to SEED. */ -static void -sbrand (seed) - unsigned long seed; -{ - rseed = seed; - last_random_value = 0; -} - -static void -seedrand () -{ - struct timeval tv; - - gettimeofday (&tv, NULL); - sbrand (tv.tv_sec ^ tv.tv_usec ^ getpid ()); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_random (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - sbrand (strtoul (value, (char **)NULL, 10)); - if (subshell_environment) - seeded_subshell = getpid (); - return (self); -} - -int -get_random_number () -{ - int rv, pid; - - /* Reset for command and process substitution. */ - pid = getpid (); - if (subshell_environment && seeded_subshell != pid) - { - seedrand (); - seeded_subshell = pid; - } - - do - rv = brand (); - while (rv == last_random_value); - return rv; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_random (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - int rv; - char *p; - - rv = get_random_number (); - last_random_value = rv; - p = itos (rv); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - VSETATTR (var, att_integer); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_lineno (var, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - intmax_t new_value; - - if (value == 0 || *value == '\0' || legal_number (value, &new_value) == 0) - new_value = 0; - line_number = line_number_base = new_value; - return var; -} - -/* Function which returns the current line number. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_lineno (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - int ln; - - ln = executing_line_number (); - p = itos (ln); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_subshell (var, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - intmax_t new_value; - - if (value == 0 || *value == '\0' || legal_number (value, &new_value) == 0) - new_value = 0; - subshell_level = new_value; - return var; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_subshell (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - p = itos (subshell_level); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_bashpid (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - int pid; - char *p; - - pid = getpid (); - p = itos (pid); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - VSETATTR (var, att_integer|att_readonly); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_bash_command (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - if (the_printed_command_except_trap) - p = savestring (the_printed_command_except_trap); - else - { - p = (char *)xmalloc (1); - p[0] = '\0'; - } - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} - -#if defined (HISTORY) -static SHELL_VAR * -get_histcmd (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - char *p; - - p = itos (history_number ()); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, p); - return (var); -} -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -/* When this function returns, VAR->value points to malloced memory. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_comp_wordbreaks (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - /* If we don't have anything yet, assign a default value. */ - if (rl_completer_word_break_characters == 0 && bash_readline_initialized == 0) - enable_hostname_completion (perform_hostname_completion); - - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, savestring (rl_completer_word_break_characters)); - - return (var); -} - -/* When this function returns, rl_completer_word_break_characters points to - malloced memory. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_comp_wordbreaks (self, value, unused, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t unused; - char *key; -{ - if (rl_completer_word_break_characters && - rl_completer_word_break_characters != rl_basic_word_break_characters) - free (rl_completer_word_break_characters); - - rl_completer_word_break_characters = savestring (value); - return self; -} -#endif /* READLINE */ - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_dirstack (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - set_dirstack_element (ind, 1, value); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_dirstack (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - ARRAY *a; - WORD_LIST *l; - - l = get_directory_stack (0); - a = array_from_word_list (l); - array_dispose (array_cell (self)); - dispose_words (l); - var_setarray (self, a); - return self; -} -#endif /* PUSHD AND POPD && ARRAY_VARS */ - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* We don't want to initialize the group set with a call to getgroups() - unless we're asked to, but we only want to do it once. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_groupset (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - register int i; - int ng; - ARRAY *a; - static char **group_set = (char **)NULL; - - if (group_set == 0) - { - group_set = get_group_list (&ng); - a = array_cell (self); - for (i = 0; i < ng; i++) - array_insert (a, i, group_set[i]); - } - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -build_hashcmd (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - HASH_TABLE *h; - int i; - char *k, *v; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *item; - - h = assoc_cell (self); - if (h) - assoc_dispose (h); - - if (hashed_filenames == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (hashed_filenames) == 0) - { - var_setvalue (self, (char *)NULL); - return self; - } - - h = assoc_create (hashed_filenames->nbuckets); - for (i = 0; i < hashed_filenames->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (item = hash_items (i, hashed_filenames); item; item = item->next) - { - k = savestring (item->key); - v = pathdata(item)->path; - assoc_insert (h, k, v); - } - } - - var_setvalue (self, (char *)h); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_hashcmd (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - build_hashcmd (self); - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_hashcmd (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - phash_insert (key, value, 0, 0); - return (build_hashcmd (self)); -} - -#if defined (ALIAS) -static SHELL_VAR * -build_aliasvar (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - HASH_TABLE *h; - int i; - char *k, *v; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *item; - - h = assoc_cell (self); - if (h) - assoc_dispose (h); - - if (aliases == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (aliases) == 0) - { - var_setvalue (self, (char *)NULL); - return self; - } - - h = assoc_create (aliases->nbuckets); - for (i = 0; i < aliases->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (item = hash_items (i, aliases); item; item = item->next) - { - k = savestring (item->key); - v = ((alias_t *)(item->data))->value; - assoc_insert (h, k, v); - } - } - - var_setvalue (self, (char *)h); - return self; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -get_aliasvar (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ - build_aliasvar (self); - return (self); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -assign_aliasvar (self, value, ind, key) - SHELL_VAR *self; - char *value; - arrayind_t ind; - char *key; -{ - add_alias (key, value); - return (build_aliasvar (self)); -} -#endif /* ALIAS */ - -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -/* If ARRAY_VARS is not defined, this just returns the name of any - currently-executing function. If we have arrays, it's a call stack. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -get_funcname (self) - SHELL_VAR *self; -{ -#if ! defined (ARRAY_VARS) - char *t; - if (variable_context && this_shell_function) - { - FREE (value_cell (self)); - t = savestring (this_shell_function->name); - var_setvalue (self, t); - } -#endif - return (self); -} - -void -make_funcname_visible (on_or_off) - int on_or_off; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("FUNCNAME"); - if (v == 0 || v->dynamic_value == 0) - return; - - if (on_or_off) - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - else - VSETATTR (v, att_invisible); -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -init_funcname_var () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("FUNCNAME"); - if (v) - return v; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - INIT_DYNAMIC_ARRAY_VAR ("FUNCNAME", get_funcname, null_array_assign); -#else - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("FUNCNAME", (char *)NULL, get_funcname, null_assign); -#endif - VSETATTR (v, att_invisible|att_noassign); - return v; -} - -static void -initialize_dynamic_variables () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = init_seconds_var (); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASH_COMMAND", (char *)NULL, get_bash_command, (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL); - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASH_SUBSHELL", (char *)NULL, get_subshell, assign_subshell); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("RANDOM", (char *)NULL, get_random, assign_random); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("LINENO", (char *)NULL, get_lineno, assign_lineno); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("BASHPID", (char *)NULL, get_bashpid, null_assign); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer|att_readonly); - -#if defined (HISTORY) - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("HISTCMD", (char *)NULL, get_histcmd, (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL); - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) - INIT_DYNAMIC_VAR ("COMP_WORDBREAKS", (char *)NULL, get_comp_wordbreaks, assign_comp_wordbreaks); -#endif - -#if defined (PUSHD_AND_POPD) && defined (ARRAY_VARS) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("DIRSTACK", get_dirstack, assign_dirstack, 0); -#endif /* PUSHD_AND_POPD && ARRAY_VARS */ - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("GROUPS", get_groupset, null_array_assign, att_noassign); - -# if defined (DEBUGGER) - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_ARGC", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_ARGV", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); -# endif /* DEBUGGER */ - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_SOURCE", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - v = init_dynamic_array_var ("BASH_LINENO", get_self, null_array_assign, att_noassign|att_nounset); - - v = init_dynamic_assoc_var ("BASH_CMDS", get_hashcmd, assign_hashcmd, att_nofree); -# if defined (ALIAS) - v = init_dynamic_assoc_var ("BASH_ALIASES", get_aliasvar, assign_aliasvar, att_nofree); -# endif -#endif - - v = init_funcname_var (); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Retrieving variables and values */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* How to get a pointer to the shell variable or function named NAME. - HASHED_VARS is a pointer to the hash table containing the list - of interest (either variables or functions). */ - -static SHELL_VAR * -hash_lookup (name, hashed_vars) - const char *name; - HASH_TABLE *hashed_vars; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *bucket; - - bucket = hash_search (name, hashed_vars, 0); - /* If we find the name in HASHED_VARS, set LAST_TABLE_SEARCHED to that - table. */ - if (bucket) - last_table_searched = hashed_vars; - return (bucket ? (SHELL_VAR *)bucket->data : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -var_lookup (name, vcontext) - const char *name; - VAR_CONTEXT *vcontext; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - for (vc = vcontext; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (v = hash_lookup (name, vc->table)) - break; - - return v; -} - -/* Look up the variable entry named NAME. If SEARCH_TEMPENV is non-zero, - then also search the temporarily built list of exported variables. - The lookup order is: - temporary_env - shell_variables list -*/ - -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_internal (name, force_tempenv) - const char *name; - int force_tempenv; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - int search_tempenv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - /* If explicitly requested, first look in the temporary environment for - the variable. This allows constructs such as "foo=x eval 'echo $foo'" - to get the `exported' value of $foo. This happens if we are executing - a function or builtin, or if we are looking up a variable in a - "subshell environment". */ - search_tempenv = force_tempenv || (expanding_redir == 0 && subshell_environment); - - if (search_tempenv && temporary_env) - var = hash_lookup (name, temporary_env); - - vc = shell_variables; -#if 0 -if (search_tempenv == 0 && /* (subshell_environment & SUBSHELL_COMSUB) && */ - expanding_redir && - (this_shell_builtin == eval_builtin || this_shell_builtin == command_builtin)) - { - itrace("find_variable_internal: search_tempenv == 0: skipping VC_BLTNENV"); - while (vc && (vc->flags & VC_BLTNENV)) - vc = vc->down; - if (vc == 0) - vc = shell_variables; - } -#endif - - if (var == 0) - var = var_lookup (name, vc); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -/* Look up and resolve the chain of nameref variables starting at V all the - way to NULL or non-nameref. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_nameref (v) - SHELL_VAR *v; -{ - int level; - char *newname; - SHELL_VAR *orig, *oldv; - - level = 0; - orig = v; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - oldv = v; - v = find_variable_internal (newname, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - if (v == orig || v == oldv) - { - internal_warning (_("%s: circular name reference"), orig->name); - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - } - } - return v; -} - -/* Resolve the chain of nameref variables for NAME. XXX - could change later */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_last_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v = find_variable_noref (name); - level = 0; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - nv = v; - v = find_variable_internal (newname, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - } - return nv; -} - -/* Resolve the chain of nameref variables for NAME. XXX - could change later */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable_last_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v = find_global_variable_noref (name); - level = 0; - while (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); /* error message here? */ - newname = nameref_cell (v); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)0); - nv = v; - v = find_global_variable_noref (newname); - } - return nv; -} - -static SHELL_VAR * -find_nameref_at_context (v, vc) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - char *newname; - int level; - - nv = v; - level = 1; - while (nv && nameref_p (nv)) - { - level++; - if (level > NAMEREF_MAX) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - newname = nameref_cell (nv); - if (newname == 0 || *newname == '\0') - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - nv2 = hash_lookup (newname, vc->table); - if (nv2 == 0) - break; - nv = nv2; - } - return nv; -} - -/* Do nameref resolution from the VC, which is the local context for some - function or builtin, `up' the chain to the global variables context. If - NVCP is not NULL, return the variable context where we finally ended the - nameref resolution (so the bind_variable_internal can use the correct - variable context and hash table). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_nameref_context (v, vc, nvcp) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - VAR_CONTEXT **nvcp; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - - /* Look starting at the current context all the way `up' */ - for (nv = v, nvc = vc; nvc; nvc = nvc->down) - { - nv2 = find_nameref_at_context (nv, nvc); - if (nv2 == 0) - continue; - nv = nv2; - if (*nvcp) - *nvcp = nvc; - } - return (nameref_p (nv) ? (SHELL_VAR *)NULL : nv); -} - -/* Do nameref resolution from the VC, which is the local context for some - function or builtin, `up' the chain to the global variables context. If - NVCP is not NULL, return the variable context where we finally ended the - nameref resolution (so the bind_variable_internal can use the correct - variable context and hash table). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_last_nameref_context (v, vc, nvcp) - SHELL_VAR *v; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - VAR_CONTEXT **nvcp; -{ - SHELL_VAR *nv, *nv2; - VAR_CONTEXT *nvc; - - /* Look starting at the current context all the way `up' */ - for (nv = v, nvc = vc; nvc; nvc = nvc->down) - { - nv2 = find_nameref_at_context (nv, nvc); - if (nv2 == 0) - continue; - nv = nv2; - if (*nvcp) - *nvcp = nvc; - } - return (nameref_p (nv) ? nv : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -/* Find a variable, forcing a search of the temporary environment first */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_tempenv (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable_internal (name, 1); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - return (var); -} - -/* Find a variable, not forcing a search of the temporary environment first */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_notempenv (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable_internal (name, 0); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - return (var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, global_variables); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_global_variable_noref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, global_variables); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_shell_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - if (var && nameref_p (var)) - var = find_variable_nameref (var); - - if (var == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - - return (var->dynamic_value ? (*(var->dynamic_value)) (var) : var); -} - -/* Look up the variable entry named NAME. Returns the entry or NULL. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - last_table_searched = 0; - v = find_variable_internal (name, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - v = find_variable_nameref (v); - return v; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -find_variable_noref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable_internal (name, (expanding_redir == 0 && (assigning_in_environment || executing_builtin))); - return v; -} - -/* Look up the function entry whose name matches STRING. - Returns the entry or NULL. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_function (name) - const char *name; -{ - return (hash_lookup (name, shell_functions)); -} - -/* Find the function definition for the shell function named NAME. Returns - the entry or NULL. */ -FUNCTION_DEF * -find_function_def (name) - const char *name; -{ -#if defined (DEBUGGER) - return ((FUNCTION_DEF *)hash_lookup (name, shell_function_defs)); -#else - return ((FUNCTION_DEF *)0); -#endif -} - -/* Return the value of VAR. VAR is assumed to have been the result of a - lookup without any subscript, if arrays are compiled into the shell. */ -char * -get_variable_value (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var == 0) - return ((char *)NULL); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - return (array_reference (array_cell (var), 0)); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - return (assoc_reference (assoc_cell (var), "0")); -#endif - else - return (value_cell (var)); -} - -/* Return the string value of a variable. Return NULL if the variable - doesn't exist. Don't cons a new string. This is a potential memory - leak if the variable is found in the temporary environment. Since - functions and variables have separate name spaces, returns NULL if - var_name is a shell function only. */ -char * -get_string_value (var_name) - const char *var_name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = find_variable (var_name); - return ((var) ? get_variable_value (var) : (char *)NULL); -} - -/* This is present for use by the tilde and readline libraries. */ -char * -sh_get_env_value (v) - const char *v; -{ - return get_string_value (v); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating and setting variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Set NAME to VALUE if NAME has no value. */ -SHELL_VAR * -set_if_not (name, value) - char *name, *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - v = bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, HASH_NOSRCH, 0); - return (v); -} - -/* Create a local variable referenced by NAME. */ -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *new_var, *old_var; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - int was_tmpvar; - char *tmp_value; - - /* local foo; local foo; is a no-op. */ - old_var = find_variable (name); - if (old_var && local_p (old_var) && old_var->context == variable_context) - { - VUNSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - return (old_var); - } - - was_tmpvar = old_var && tempvar_p (old_var); - /* If we're making a local variable in a shell function, the temporary env - has already been merged into the function's variable context stack. We - can assume that a temporary var in the same context appears in the same - VAR_CONTEXT and can safely be returned without creating a new variable - (which results in duplicate names in the same VAR_CONTEXT->table */ - /* We can't just test tmpvar_p because variables in the temporary env given - to a shell function appear in the function's local variable VAR_CONTEXT - but retain their tempvar attribute. We want temporary variables that are - found in temporary_env, hence the test for last_table_searched, which is - set in hash_lookup and only (so far) checked here. */ - if (was_tmpvar && old_var->context == variable_context && last_table_searched != temporary_env) - { - VUNSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - return (old_var); - } - if (was_tmpvar) - tmp_value = value_cell (old_var); - - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - - if (vc == 0) - { - internal_error (_("make_local_variable: no function context at current scope")); - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - } - else if (vc->table == 0) - vc->table = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - - /* Since this is called only from the local/declare/typeset code, we can - call builtin_error here without worry (of course, it will also work - for anything that sets this_command_name). Variables with the `noassign' - attribute may not be made local. The test against old_var's context - level is to disallow local copies of readonly global variables (since I - believe that this could be a security hole). Readonly copies of calling - function local variables are OK. */ - if (old_var && (noassign_p (old_var) || - (readonly_p (old_var) && old_var->context == 0))) - { - if (readonly_p (old_var)) - sh_readonly (name); - else if (noassign_p (old_var)) - builtin_error (_("%s: variable may not be assigned value"), name); -#if 0 - /* Let noassign variables through with a warning */ - if (readonly_p (old_var)) -#endif - return ((SHELL_VAR *)NULL); - } - - if (old_var == 0) - new_var = make_new_variable (name, vc->table); - else - { - new_var = make_new_variable (name, vc->table); - - /* If we found this variable in one of the temporary environments, - inherit its value. Watch to see if this causes problems with - things like `x=4 local x'. XXX - see above for temporary env - variables with the same context level as variable_context */ - /* XXX - we should only do this if the variable is not an array. */ - if (was_tmpvar) - var_setvalue (new_var, savestring (tmp_value)); - - new_var->attributes = exported_p (old_var) ? att_exported : 0; - } - - vc->flags |= VC_HASLOCAL; - - new_var->context = variable_context; - VSETATTR (new_var, att_local); - - if (ifsname (name)) - setifs (new_var); - - return (new_var); -} - -/* Create a new shell variable with name NAME. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -new_shell_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = (SHELL_VAR *)xmalloc (sizeof (SHELL_VAR)); - - entry->name = savestring (name); - var_setvalue (entry, (char *)NULL); - CLEAR_EXPORTSTR (entry); - - entry->dynamic_value = (sh_var_value_func_t *)NULL; - entry->assign_func = (sh_var_assign_func_t *)NULL; - - entry->attributes = 0; - - /* Always assume variables are to be made at toplevel! - make_local_variable has the responsibilty of changing the - variable context. */ - entry->context = 0; - - return (entry); -} - -/* Create a new shell variable with name NAME and add it to the hash table - TABLE. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -make_new_variable (name, table) - const char *name; - HASH_TABLE *table; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - - entry = new_shell_variable (name); - - /* Make sure we have a shell_variables hash table to add to. */ - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), table, HASH_NOSRCH); - elt->data = (PTR_T)entry; - - return entry; -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -SHELL_VAR * -make_new_array_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - ARRAY *array; - - entry = make_new_variable (name, global_variables->table); - array = array_create (); - - var_setarray (entry, array); - VSETATTR (entry, att_array); - return entry; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_array_variable (name, assoc_ok) - char *name; - int assoc_ok; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - ARRAY *array; - - var = make_local_variable (name); - if (var == 0 || array_p (var) || (assoc_ok && assoc_p (var))) - return var; - - array = array_create (); - - dispose_variable_value (var); - var_setarray (var, array); - VSETATTR (var, att_array); - return var; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_new_assoc_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - HASH_TABLE *hash; - - entry = make_new_variable (name, global_variables->table); - hash = assoc_create (0); - - var_setassoc (entry, hash); - VSETATTR (entry, att_assoc); - return entry; -} - -SHELL_VAR * -make_local_assoc_variable (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - HASH_TABLE *hash; - - var = make_local_variable (name); - if (var == 0 || assoc_p (var)) - return var; - - dispose_variable_value (var); - hash = assoc_create (0); - - var_setassoc (var, hash); - VSETATTR (var, att_assoc); - return var; -} -#endif - -char * -make_variable_value (var, value, flags) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - char *retval, *oval; - intmax_t lval, rval; - int expok, olen, op; - - /* If this variable has had its type set to integer (via `declare -i'), - then do expression evaluation on it and store the result. The - functions in expr.c (evalexp()) and bind_int_variable() are responsible - for turning off the integer flag if they don't want further - evaluation done. */ - if (integer_p (var)) - { - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = value_cell (var); - lval = evalexp (oval, &expok); /* ksh93 seems to do this */ - if (expok == 0) - { - top_level_cleanup (); - jump_to_top_level (DISCARD); - } - } - rval = evalexp (value, &expok); - if (expok == 0) - { - top_level_cleanup (); - jump_to_top_level (DISCARD); - } - /* This can be fooled if the variable's value changes while evaluating - `rval'. We can change it if we move the evaluation of lval to here. */ - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - rval += lval; - retval = itos (rval); - } -#if defined (CASEMOD_ATTRS) - else if (capcase_p (var) || uppercase_p (var) || lowercase_p (var)) - { - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = get_variable_value (var); - if (oval == 0) /* paranoia */ - oval = ""; - olen = STRLEN (oval); - retval = (char *)xmalloc (olen + (value ? STRLEN (value) : 0) + 1); - strcpy (retval, oval); - if (value) - strcpy (retval+olen, value); - } - else if (*value) - retval = savestring (value); - else - { - retval = (char *)xmalloc (1); - retval[0] = '\0'; - } - op = capcase_p (var) ? CASE_CAPITALIZE - : (uppercase_p (var) ? CASE_UPPER : CASE_LOWER); - oval = sh_modcase (retval, (char *)0, op); - free (retval); - retval = oval; - } -#endif /* CASEMOD_ATTRS */ - else if (value) - { - if (flags & ASS_APPEND) - { - oval = get_variable_value (var); - if (oval == 0) /* paranoia */ - oval = ""; - olen = STRLEN (oval); - retval = (char *)xmalloc (olen + (value ? STRLEN (value) : 0) + 1); - strcpy (retval, oval); - if (value) - strcpy (retval+olen, value); - } - else if (*value) - retval = savestring (value); - else - { - retval = (char *)xmalloc (1); - retval[0] = '\0'; - } - } - else - retval = (char *)NULL; - - return retval; -} - -/* Bind a variable NAME to VALUE in the HASH_TABLE TABLE, which may be the - temporary environment (but usually is not). */ -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable_internal (name, value, table, hflags, aflags) - const char *name; - char *value; - HASH_TABLE *table; - int hflags, aflags; -{ - char *newval; - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = (hflags & HASH_NOSRCH) ? (SHELL_VAR *)NULL : hash_lookup (name, table); - /* Follow the nameref chain here if this is the global variables table */ - if (entry && nameref_p (entry) && (invisible_p (entry) == 0) && table == global_variables->table) - { - entry = find_global_variable (entry->name); - /* Let's see if we have a nameref referencing a variable that hasn't yet - been created. */ - if (entry == 0) - entry = find_variable_last_nameref (name); /* XXX */ - if (entry == 0) /* just in case */ - return (entry); - } - - /* The first clause handles `declare -n ref; ref=x;' */ - if (entry && invisible_p (entry) && nameref_p (entry)) - goto assign_value; - else if (entry && nameref_p (entry)) - { - newval = nameref_cell (entry); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - /* declare -n foo=x[2] */ - if (valid_array_reference (newval)) - /* XXX - should it be aflags? */ - entry = assign_array_element (newval, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0), aflags); - else -#endif - { - entry = make_new_variable (newval, table); - var_setvalue (entry, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0)); - } - } - else if (entry == 0) - { - entry = make_new_variable (name, table); - var_setvalue (entry, make_variable_value (entry, value, 0)); /* XXX */ - } - else if (entry->assign_func) /* array vars have assign functions now */ - { - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - newval = (aflags & ASS_APPEND) ? make_variable_value (entry, value, aflags) : value; - if (assoc_p (entry)) - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, -1, savestring ("0")); - else if (array_p (entry)) - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, 0, 0); - else - entry = (*(entry->assign_func)) (entry, newval, -1, 0); - if (newval != value) - free (newval); - return (entry); - } - else - { -assign_value: - if (readonly_p (entry) || noassign_p (entry)) - { - if (readonly_p (entry)) - err_readonly (name); - return (entry); - } - - /* Variables which are bound are visible. */ - VUNSETATTR (entry, att_invisible); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (assoc_p (entry) || array_p (entry)) - newval = make_array_variable_value (entry, 0, "0", value, aflags); - else -#endif - - newval = make_variable_value (entry, value, aflags); /* XXX */ - - /* Invalidate any cached export string */ - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - /* XXX -- this bears looking at again -- XXX */ - /* If an existing array variable x is being assigned to with x=b or - `read x' or something of that nature, silently convert it to - x[0]=b or `read x[0]'. */ - if (assoc_p (entry)) - { - assoc_insert (assoc_cell (entry), savestring ("0"), newval); - free (newval); - } - else if (array_p (entry)) - { - array_insert (array_cell (entry), 0, newval); - free (newval); - } - else -#endif - { - FREE (value_cell (entry)); - var_setvalue (entry, newval); - } - } - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (entry, att_exported); - - if (exported_p (entry)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - return (entry); -} - -/* Bind a variable NAME to VALUE. This conses up the name - and value strings. If we have a temporary environment, we bind there - first, then we bind into shell_variables. */ - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable (name, value, flags) - const char *name; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc, *nvc; - int level; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - /* If we have a temporary environment, look there first for the variable, - and, if found, modify the value there before modifying it in the - shell_variables table. This allows sourced scripts to modify values - given to them in a temporary environment while modifying the variable - value that the caller sees. */ - if (temporary_env) - bind_tempenv_variable (name, value); - - /* XXX -- handle local variables here. */ - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - { - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) || vc_isbltnenv (vc)) - { - v = hash_lookup (name, vc->table); - nvc = vc; - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - { - nv = find_variable_nameref_context (v, vc, &nvc); - if (nv == 0) - { - nv = find_variable_last_nameref_context (v, vc, &nvc); - if (nv && nameref_p (nv)) - return (bind_variable_internal (nameref_cell (nv), value, nvc->table, 0, flags)); - else - v = nv; - } - else - v = nv; - } - if (v) - return (bind_variable_internal (v->name, value, nvc->table, 0, flags)); - } - } - /* bind_variable_internal will handle nameref resolution in this case */ - return (bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, 0, flags)); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_global_variable (name, value, flags) - const char *name; - char *value; - int flags; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc, *nvc; - int level; - - if (shell_variables == 0) - create_variable_tables (); - - /* bind_variable_internal will handle nameref resolution in this case */ - return (bind_variable_internal (name, value, global_variables->table, 0, flags)); -} - -/* Make VAR, a simple shell variable, have value VALUE. Once assigned a - value, variables are no longer invisible. This is a duplicate of part - of the internals of bind_variable. If the variable is exported, or - all modified variables should be exported, mark the variable for export - and note that the export environment needs to be recreated. */ -SHELL_VAR * -bind_variable_value (var, value, aflags) - SHELL_VAR *var; - char *value; - int aflags; -{ - char *t; - - VUNSETATTR (var, att_invisible); - - if (var->assign_func) - { - /* If we're appending, we need the old value, so use - make_variable_value */ - t = (aflags & ASS_APPEND) ? make_variable_value (var, value, aflags) : value; - (*(var->assign_func)) (var, t, -1, 0); - if (t != value && t) - free (t); - } - else - { - t = make_variable_value (var, value, aflags); - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, t); - } - - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (var, att_exported); - - if (exported_p (var)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - return (var); -} - -/* Bind/create a shell variable with the name LHS to the RHS. - This creates or modifies a variable such that it is an integer. - - This used to be in expr.c, but it is here so that all of the - variable binding stuff is localized. Since we don't want any - recursive evaluation from bind_variable() (possible without this code, - since bind_variable() calls the evaluator for variables with the integer - attribute set), we temporarily turn off the integer attribute for each - variable we set here, then turn it back on after binding as necessary. */ - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_int_variable (lhs, rhs) - char *lhs, *rhs; -{ - register SHELL_VAR *v; - int isint, isarr, implicitarray; - - isint = isarr = implicitarray = 0; -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (valid_array_reference (lhs)) - { - isarr = 1; - v = array_variable_part (lhs, (char **)0, (int *)0); - } - else -#endif - v = find_variable (lhs); - - if (v) - { - isint = integer_p (v); - VUNSETATTR (v, att_integer); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (array_p (v) && isarr == 0) - implicitarray = 1; -#endif - } - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (isarr) - v = assign_array_element (lhs, rhs, 0); - else if (implicitarray) - v = bind_array_variable (lhs, 0, rhs, 0); - else -#endif - v = bind_variable (lhs, rhs, 0); - - if (v && isint) - VSETATTR (v, att_integer); - - VUNSETATTR (v, att_invisible); - - return (v); -} - -SHELL_VAR * -bind_var_to_int (var, val) - char *var; - intmax_t val; -{ - char ibuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND (intmax_t) + 1], *p; - - p = fmtulong (val, 10, ibuf, sizeof (ibuf), 0); - return (bind_int_variable (var, p)); -} - -/* Do a function binding to a variable. You pass the name and - the command to bind to. This conses the name and command. */ -SHELL_VAR * -bind_function (name, value) - const char *name; - COMMAND *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry == 0) - { - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), shell_functions, HASH_NOSRCH); - entry = new_shell_variable (name); - elt->data = (PTR_T)entry; - } - else - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (entry); - - if (var_isset (entry)) - dispose_command (function_cell (entry)); - - if (value) - var_setfunc (entry, copy_command (value)); - else - var_setfunc (entry, 0); - - VSETATTR (entry, att_function); - - if (mark_modified_vars) - VSETATTR (entry, att_exported); - - VUNSETATTR (entry, att_invisible); /* Just to be sure */ - - if (exported_p (entry)) - array_needs_making = 1; - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - set_itemlist_dirty (&it_functions); -#endif - - return (entry); -} - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -/* Bind a function definition, which includes source file and line number - information in addition to the command, into the FUNCTION_DEF hash table.*/ -void -bind_function_def (name, value) - const char *name; - FUNCTION_DEF *value; -{ - FUNCTION_DEF *entry; - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - COMMAND *cmd; - - entry = find_function_def (name); - if (entry) - { - dispose_function_def_contents (entry); - entry = copy_function_def_contents (value, entry); - } - else - { - cmd = value->command; - value->command = 0; - entry = copy_function_def (value); - value->command = cmd; - - elt = hash_insert (savestring (name), shell_function_defs, HASH_NOSRCH); - elt->data = (PTR_T *)entry; - } -} -#endif /* DEBUGGER */ - -/* Add STRING, which is of the form foo=bar, to the temporary environment - HASH_TABLE (temporary_env). The functions in execute_cmd.c are - responsible for moving the main temporary env to one of the other - temporary environments. The expansion code in subst.c calls this. */ -int -assign_in_env (word, flags) - WORD_DESC *word; - int flags; -{ - int offset, aflags; - char *name, *temp, *value; - SHELL_VAR *var; - const char *string; - - string = word->word; - - aflags = 0; - offset = assignment (string, 0); - name = savestring (string); - value = (char *)NULL; - - if (name[offset] == '=') - { - name[offset] = 0; - - /* don't ignore the `+' when assigning temporary environment */ - if (name[offset - 1] == '+') - { - name[offset - 1] = '\0'; - aflags |= ASS_APPEND; - } - - var = find_variable (name); - if (var && (readonly_p (var) || noassign_p (var))) - { - if (readonly_p (var)) - err_readonly (name); - free (name); - return (0); - } - - temp = name + offset + 1; - value = expand_assignment_string_to_string (temp, 0); - - if (var && (aflags & ASS_APPEND)) - { - temp = make_variable_value (var, value, aflags); - FREE (value); - value = temp; - } - } - - if (temporary_env == 0) - temporary_env = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - - var = hash_lookup (name, temporary_env); - if (var == 0) - var = make_new_variable (name, temporary_env); - else - FREE (value_cell (var)); - - if (value == 0) - { - value = (char *)xmalloc (1); /* like do_assignment_internal */ - value[0] = '\0'; - } - - var_setvalue (var, value); - var->attributes |= (att_exported|att_tempvar); - var->context = variable_context; /* XXX */ - - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - var->exportstr = mk_env_string (name, value); - - array_needs_making = 1; - - if (flags) - stupidly_hack_special_variables (name); - - if (echo_command_at_execute) - /* The Korn shell prints the `+ ' in front of assignment statements, - so we do too. */ - xtrace_print_assignment (name, value, 0, 1); - - free (name); - return 1; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Copying variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -/* Copy VAR to a new data structure and return that structure. */ -SHELL_VAR * -copy_variable (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - SHELL_VAR *copy = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - if (var) - { - copy = (SHELL_VAR *)xmalloc (sizeof (SHELL_VAR)); - - copy->attributes = var->attributes; - copy->name = savestring (var->name); - - if (function_p (var)) - var_setfunc (copy, copy_command (function_cell (var))); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - var_setarray (copy, array_copy (array_cell (var))); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - var_setassoc (copy, assoc_copy (assoc_cell (var))); -#endif - else if (nameref_cell (var)) /* XXX - nameref */ - var_setref (copy, savestring (nameref_cell (var))); - else if (value_cell (var)) /* XXX - nameref */ - var_setvalue (copy, savestring (value_cell (var))); - else - var_setvalue (copy, (char *)NULL); - - copy->dynamic_value = var->dynamic_value; - copy->assign_func = var->assign_func; - - copy->exportstr = COPY_EXPORTSTR (var); - - copy->context = var->context; - } - return (copy); -} -#endif - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Deleting and unsetting variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Dispose of the information attached to VAR. */ -static void -dispose_variable_value (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (function_p (var)) - dispose_command (function_cell (var)); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) - array_dispose (array_cell (var)); - else if (assoc_p (var)) - assoc_dispose (assoc_cell (var)); -#endif - else if (nameref_p (var)) - FREE (nameref_cell (var)); - else - FREE (value_cell (var)); -} - -void -dispose_variable (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - if (var == 0) - return; - - if (nofree_p (var) == 0) - dispose_variable_value (var); - - FREE_EXPORTSTR (var); - - free (var->name); - - if (exported_p (var)) - array_needs_making = 1; - - free (var); -} - -/* Unset the shell variable referenced by NAME. Unsetting a nameref variable - unsets the variable it resolves to but leaves the nameref alone. */ -int -unbind_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v, *nv; - int r; - - v = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - nv = (v && nameref_p (v)) ? find_variable_nameref (v) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - r = nv ? makunbound (nv->name, shell_variables) : makunbound (name, shell_variables); - return r; -} - -/* Unbind NAME, where NAME is assumed to be a nameref variable */ -int -unbind_nameref (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = var_lookup (name, shell_variables); - if (v && nameref_p (v)) - return makunbound (name, shell_variables); - return 0; -} - -/* Unset the shell function named NAME. */ -int -unbind_func (name) - const char *name; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - SHELL_VAR *func; - - elt = hash_remove (name, shell_functions, 0); - - if (elt == 0) - return -1; - -#if defined (PROGRAMMABLE_COMPLETION) - set_itemlist_dirty (&it_functions); -#endif - - func = (SHELL_VAR *)elt->data; - if (func) - { - if (exported_p (func)) - array_needs_making++; - dispose_variable (func); - } - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - return 0; -} - -#if defined (DEBUGGER) -int -unbind_function_def (name) - const char *name; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt; - FUNCTION_DEF *funcdef; - - elt = hash_remove (name, shell_function_defs, 0); - - if (elt == 0) - return -1; - - funcdef = (FUNCTION_DEF *)elt->data; - if (funcdef) - dispose_function_def (funcdef); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - return 0; -} -#endif /* DEBUGGER */ - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME go away. HASH_LIST is the - hash table from which this variable should be deleted (either - shell_variables or shell_functions). - Returns non-zero if the variable couldn't be found. */ -int -makunbound (name, vc) - const char *name; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - BUCKET_CONTENTS *elt, *new_elt; - SHELL_VAR *old_var; - VAR_CONTEXT *v; - char *t; - - for (elt = (BUCKET_CONTENTS *)NULL, v = vc; v; v = v->down) - if (elt = hash_remove (name, v->table, 0)) - break; - - if (elt == 0) - return (-1); - - old_var = (SHELL_VAR *)elt->data; - - if (old_var && exported_p (old_var)) - array_needs_making++; - - /* If we're unsetting a local variable and we're still executing inside - the function, just mark the variable as invisible. The function - eventually called by pop_var_context() will clean it up later. This - must be done so that if the variable is subsequently assigned a new - value inside the function, the `local' attribute is still present. - We also need to add it back into the correct hash table. */ - if (old_var && local_p (old_var) && variable_context == old_var->context) - { - if (nofree_p (old_var)) - var_setvalue (old_var, (char *)NULL); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (old_var)) - array_dispose (array_cell (old_var)); - else if (assoc_p (old_var)) - assoc_dispose (assoc_cell (old_var)); -#endif - else if (nameref_p (old_var)) - FREE (nameref_cell (old_var)); - else - FREE (value_cell (old_var)); - /* Reset the attributes. Preserve the export attribute if the variable - came from a temporary environment. Make sure it stays local, and - make it invisible. */ - old_var->attributes = (exported_p (old_var) && tempvar_p (old_var)) ? att_exported : 0; - VSETATTR (old_var, att_local); - VSETATTR (old_var, att_invisible); - var_setvalue (old_var, (char *)NULL); - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (old_var); - - new_elt = hash_insert (savestring (old_var->name), v->table, 0); - new_elt->data = (PTR_T)old_var; - stupidly_hack_special_variables (old_var->name); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - return (0); - } - - /* Have to save a copy of name here, because it might refer to - old_var->name. If so, stupidly_hack_special_variables will - reference freed memory. */ - t = savestring (name); - - free (elt->key); - free (elt); - - dispose_variable (old_var); - stupidly_hack_special_variables (t); - free (t); - - return (0); -} - -/* Get rid of all of the variables in the current context. */ -void -kill_all_local_variables () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - if (vc == 0) - return; /* XXX */ - - if (vc->table && vc_haslocals (vc)) - { - delete_all_variables (vc->table); - hash_dispose (vc->table); - } - vc->table = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; -} - -static void -free_variable_hash_data (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - dispose_variable (var); -} - -/* Delete the entire contents of the hash table. */ -void -delete_all_variables (hashed_vars) - HASH_TABLE *hashed_vars; -{ - hash_flush (hashed_vars, free_variable_hash_data); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Setting variable attributes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -#define FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE(name, entry) \ - do \ - { \ - entry = find_variable (name); \ - if (!entry) \ - { \ - entry = bind_variable (name, "", 0); \ - if (!no_invisible_vars && entry) entry->attributes |= att_invisible; \ - } \ - } \ - while (0) - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME be readonly. - If NAME does not exist yet, create it. */ -void -set_var_read_only (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE (name, entry); - VSETATTR (entry, att_readonly); -} - -#ifdef INCLUDE_UNUSED -/* Make the function associated with NAME be readonly. - If NAME does not exist, we just punt, like auto_export code below. */ -void -set_func_read_only (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry) - VSETATTR (entry, att_readonly); -} - -/* Make the variable associated with NAME be auto-exported. - If NAME does not exist yet, create it. */ -void -set_var_auto_export (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - FIND_OR_MAKE_VARIABLE (name, entry); - set_auto_export (entry); -} - -/* Make the function associated with NAME be auto-exported. */ -void -set_func_auto_export (name) - const char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *entry; - - entry = find_function (name); - if (entry) - set_auto_export (entry); -} -#endif - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating lists of variables */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static VARLIST * -vlist_alloc (nentries) - int nentries; -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - - vlist = (VARLIST *)xmalloc (sizeof (VARLIST)); - vlist->list = (SHELL_VAR **)xmalloc ((nentries + 1) * sizeof (SHELL_VAR *)); - vlist->list_size = nentries; - vlist->list_len = 0; - vlist->list[0] = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - return vlist; -} - -static VARLIST * -vlist_realloc (vlist, n) - VARLIST *vlist; - int n; -{ - if (vlist == 0) - return (vlist = vlist_alloc (n)); - if (n > vlist->list_size) - { - vlist->list_size = n; - vlist->list = (SHELL_VAR **)xrealloc (vlist->list, (vlist->list_size + 1) * sizeof (SHELL_VAR *)); - } - return vlist; -} - -static void -vlist_add (vlist, var, flags) - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR *var; - int flags; -{ - register int i; - - for (i = 0; i < vlist->list_len; i++) - if (STREQ (var->name, vlist->list[i]->name)) - break; - if (i < vlist->list_len) - return; - - if (i >= vlist->list_size) - vlist = vlist_realloc (vlist, vlist->list_size + 16); - - vlist->list[vlist->list_len++] = var; - vlist->list[vlist->list_len] = (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; -} - -/* Map FUNCTION over the variables in VAR_HASH_TABLE. Return an array of the - variables for which FUNCTION returns a non-zero value. A NULL value - for FUNCTION means to use all variables. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -map_over (function, vc) - sh_var_map_func_t *function; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *v; - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - int nentries; - - for (nentries = 0, v = vc; v; v = v->down) - nentries += HASH_ENTRIES (v->table); - - if (nentries == 0) - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - - vlist = vlist_alloc (nentries); - - for (v = vc; v; v = v->down) - flatten (v->table, function, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - return ret; -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -map_over_funcs (function) - sh_var_map_func_t *function; -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - - if (shell_functions == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions) == 0) - return ((SHELL_VAR **)NULL); - - vlist = vlist_alloc (HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions)); - - flatten (shell_functions, function, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - return ret; -} - -/* Flatten VAR_HASH_TABLE, applying FUNC to each member and adding those - elements for which FUNC succeeds to VLIST->list. FLAGS is reserved - for future use. Only unique names are added to VLIST. If FUNC is - NULL, each variable in VAR_HASH_TABLE is added to VLIST. If VLIST is - NULL, FUNC is applied to each SHELL_VAR in VAR_HASH_TABLE. If VLIST - and FUNC are both NULL, nothing happens. */ -static void -flatten (var_hash_table, func, vlist, flags) - HASH_TABLE *var_hash_table; - sh_var_map_func_t *func; - VARLIST *vlist; - int flags; -{ - register int i; - register BUCKET_CONTENTS *tlist; - int r; - SHELL_VAR *var; - - if (var_hash_table == 0 || (HASH_ENTRIES (var_hash_table) == 0) || (vlist == 0 && func == 0)) - return; - - for (i = 0; i < var_hash_table->nbuckets; i++) - { - for (tlist = hash_items (i, var_hash_table); tlist; tlist = tlist->next) - { - var = (SHELL_VAR *)tlist->data; - - r = func ? (*func) (var) : 1; - if (r && vlist) - vlist_add (vlist, var, flags); - } - } -} - -void -sort_variables (array) - SHELL_VAR **array; -{ - qsort (array, strvec_len ((char **)array), sizeof (SHELL_VAR *), (QSFUNC *)qsort_var_comp); -} - -static int -qsort_var_comp (var1, var2) - SHELL_VAR **var1, **var2; -{ - int result; - - if ((result = (*var1)->name[0] - (*var2)->name[0]) == 0) - result = strcmp ((*var1)->name, (*var2)->name); - - return (result); -} - -/* Apply FUNC to each variable in SHELL_VARIABLES, adding each one for - which FUNC succeeds to an array of SHELL_VAR *s. Returns the array. */ -static SHELL_VAR ** -vapply (func) - sh_var_map_func_t *func; -{ - SHELL_VAR **list; - - list = map_over (func, shell_variables); - if (list /* && posixly_correct */) - sort_variables (list); - return (list); -} - -/* Apply FUNC to each variable in SHELL_FUNCTIONS, adding each one for - which FUNC succeeds to an array of SHELL_VAR *s. Returns the array. */ -static SHELL_VAR ** -fapply (func) - sh_var_map_func_t *func; -{ - SHELL_VAR **list; - - list = map_over_funcs (func); - if (list /* && posixly_correct */) - sort_variables (list); - return (list); -} - -/* Create a NULL terminated array of all the shell variables. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -all_shell_variables () -{ - return (vapply ((sh_var_map_func_t *)NULL)); -} - -/* Create a NULL terminated array of all the shell functions. */ -SHELL_VAR ** -all_shell_functions () -{ - return (fapply ((sh_var_map_func_t *)NULL)); -} - -static int -visible_var (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_visible_functions () -{ - return (fapply (visible_var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_visible_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_var)); -} - -/* Return non-zero if the variable VAR is visible and exported. Array - variables cannot be exported. */ -static int -visible_and_exported (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && exported_p (var)); -} - -/* Candidate variables for the export environment are either valid variables - with the export attribute or invalid variables inherited from the initial - environment and simply passed through. */ -static int -export_environment_candidate (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (exported_p (var) && (invisible_p (var) == 0 || imported_p (var))); -} - -/* Return non-zero if VAR is a local variable in the current context and - is exported. */ -static int -local_and_exported (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && local_p (var) && var->context == variable_context && exported_p (var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_exported_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_and_exported)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -local_exported_variables () -{ - return (vapply (local_and_exported)); -} - -static int -variable_in_context (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && local_p (var) && var->context == variable_context); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_local_variables () -{ - VARLIST *vlist; - SHELL_VAR **ret; - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = shell_variables; - for (vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - if (vc_isfuncenv (vc) && vc->scope == variable_context) - break; - - if (vc == 0) - { - internal_error (_("all_local_variables: no function context at current scope")); - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - } - if (vc->table == 0 || HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table) == 0 || vc_haslocals (vc) == 0) - return (SHELL_VAR **)NULL; - - vlist = vlist_alloc (HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table)); - - flatten (vc->table, variable_in_context, vlist, 0); - - ret = vlist->list; - free (vlist); - if (ret) - sort_variables (ret); - return ret; -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -/* Return non-zero if the variable VAR is visible and an array. */ -static int -visible_array_vars (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (invisible_p (var) == 0 && array_p (var)); -} - -SHELL_VAR ** -all_array_variables () -{ - return (vapply (visible_array_vars)); -} -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS */ - -char ** -all_variables_matching_prefix (prefix) - const char *prefix; -{ - SHELL_VAR **varlist; - char **rlist; - int vind, rind, plen; - - plen = STRLEN (prefix); - varlist = all_visible_variables (); - for (vind = 0; varlist && varlist[vind]; vind++) - ; - if (varlist == 0 || vind == 0) - return ((char **)NULL); - rlist = strvec_create (vind + 1); - for (vind = rind = 0; varlist[vind]; vind++) - { - if (plen == 0 || STREQN (prefix, varlist[vind]->name, plen)) - rlist[rind++] = savestring (varlist[vind]->name); - } - rlist[rind] = (char *)0; - free (varlist); - - return rlist; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Managing temporary variable scopes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Make variable NAME have VALUE in the temporary environment. */ -static SHELL_VAR * -bind_tempenv_variable (name, value) - const char *name; - char *value; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = temporary_env ? hash_lookup (name, temporary_env) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL; - - if (var) - { - FREE (value_cell (var)); - var_setvalue (var, savestring (value)); - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); - } - - return (var); -} - -/* Find a variable in the temporary environment that is named NAME. - Return the SHELL_VAR *, or NULL if not found. */ -SHELL_VAR * -find_tempenv_variable (name) - const char *name; -{ - return (temporary_env ? hash_lookup (name, temporary_env) : (SHELL_VAR *)NULL); -} - -char **tempvar_list; -int tvlist_ind; - -/* Push the variable described by (SHELL_VAR *)DATA down to the next - variable context from the temporary environment. */ -static void -push_temp_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - HASH_TABLE *binding_table; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - binding_table = shell_variables->table; - if (binding_table == 0) - { - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - /* shouldn't happen */ - binding_table = shell_variables->table = global_variables->table = hash_create (0); - else - binding_table = shell_variables->table = hash_create (TEMPENV_HASH_BUCKETS); - } - - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), binding_table, 0, 0); - - /* XXX - should we set the context here? It shouldn't matter because of how - assign_in_env works, but might want to check. */ - if (binding_table == global_variables->table) /* XXX */ - var->attributes &= ~(att_tempvar|att_propagate); - else - { - var->attributes |= att_propagate; - if (binding_table == shell_variables->table) - shell_variables->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - } - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - - if (find_special_var (var->name) >= 0) - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind++] = savestring (var->name); - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -static void -propagate_temp_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - if (tempvar_p (var) && (var->attributes & att_propagate)) - push_temp_var (data); - else - { - if (find_special_var (var->name) >= 0) - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind++] = savestring (var->name); - dispose_variable (var); - } -} - -/* Free the storage used in the hash table for temporary - environment variables. PUSHF is a function to be called - to free each hash table entry. It takes care of pushing variables - to previous scopes if appropriate. PUSHF stores names of variables - that require special handling (e.g., IFS) on tempvar_list, so this - function can call stupidly_hack_special_variables on all the - variables in the list when the temporary hash table is destroyed. */ -static void -dispose_temporary_env (pushf) - sh_free_func_t *pushf; -{ - int i; - - tempvar_list = strvec_create (HASH_ENTRIES (temporary_env) + 1); - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind = 0] = 0; - - hash_flush (temporary_env, pushf); - hash_dispose (temporary_env); - temporary_env = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - - tempvar_list[tvlist_ind] = 0; - - array_needs_making = 1; - -#if 0 - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now -- check setifs in assign_in_env */ -#endif - for (i = 0; i < tvlist_ind; i++) - stupidly_hack_special_variables (tempvar_list[i]); - - strvec_dispose (tempvar_list); - tempvar_list = 0; - tvlist_ind = 0; -} - -void -dispose_used_env_vars () -{ - if (temporary_env) - { - dispose_temporary_env (propagate_temp_var); - maybe_make_export_env (); - } -} - -/* Take all of the shell variables in the temporary environment HASH_TABLE - and make shell variables from them at the current variable context. */ -void -merge_temporary_env () -{ - if (temporary_env) - dispose_temporary_env (push_temp_var); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Creating and manipulating the environment */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static inline char * -mk_env_string (name, value) - const char *name, *value; -{ - int name_len, value_len; - char *p; - - name_len = strlen (name); - value_len = STRLEN (value); - p = (char *)xmalloc (2 + name_len + value_len); - strcpy (p, name); - p[name_len] = '='; - if (value && *value) - strcpy (p + name_len + 1, value); - else - p[name_len + 1] = '\0'; - return (p); -} - -#ifdef DEBUG -/* Debugging */ -static int -valid_exportstr (v) - SHELL_VAR *v; -{ - char *s; - - s = v->exportstr; - if (s == 0) - { - internal_error (_("%s has null exportstr"), v->name); - return (0); - } - if (legal_variable_starter ((unsigned char)*s) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("invalid character %d in exportstr for %s"), *s, v->name); - return (0); - } - for (s = v->exportstr + 1; s && *s; s++) - { - if (*s == '=') - break; - if (legal_variable_char ((unsigned char)*s) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("invalid character %d in exportstr for %s"), *s, v->name); - return (0); - } - } - if (*s != '=') - { - internal_error (_("no `=' in exportstr for %s"), v->name); - return (0); - } - return (1); -} -#endif - -static char ** -make_env_array_from_var_list (vars) - SHELL_VAR **vars; -{ - register int i, list_index; - register SHELL_VAR *var; - char **list, *value; - - list = strvec_create ((1 + strvec_len ((char **)vars))); - -#define USE_EXPORTSTR (value == var->exportstr) - - for (i = 0, list_index = 0; var = vars[i]; i++) - { -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) - /* We don't use the exportstr stuff on Cygwin at all. */ - INVALIDATE_EXPORTSTR (var); -#endif - if (var->exportstr) - value = var->exportstr; - else if (function_p (var)) - value = named_function_string ((char *)NULL, function_cell (var), 0); -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - else if (array_p (var)) -# if ARRAY_EXPORT - value = array_to_assignment_string (array_cell (var)); -# else - continue; /* XXX array vars cannot yet be exported */ -# endif /* ARRAY_EXPORT */ - else if (assoc_p (var)) -# if 0 - value = assoc_to_assignment_string (assoc_cell (var)); -# else - continue; /* XXX associative array vars cannot yet be exported */ -# endif -#endif - else - value = value_cell (var); - - if (value) - { - /* Gee, I'd like to get away with not using savestring() if we're - using the cached exportstr... */ - list[list_index] = USE_EXPORTSTR ? savestring (value) - : mk_env_string (var->name, value); - - if (USE_EXPORTSTR == 0) - SAVE_EXPORTSTR (var, list[list_index]); - - list_index++; -#undef USE_EXPORTSTR - -#if 0 /* not yet */ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - if (array_p (var) || assoc_p (var)) - free (value); -#endif -#endif - } - } - - list[list_index] = (char *)NULL; - return (list); -} - -/* Make an array of assignment statements from the hash table - HASHED_VARS which contains SHELL_VARs. Only visible, exported - variables are eligible. */ -static char ** -make_var_export_array (vcxt) - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt; -{ - char **list; - SHELL_VAR **vars; - -#if 0 - vars = map_over (visible_and_exported, vcxt); -#else - vars = map_over (export_environment_candidate, vcxt); -#endif - - if (vars == 0) - return (char **)NULL; - - list = make_env_array_from_var_list (vars); - - free (vars); - return (list); -} - -static char ** -make_func_export_array () -{ - char **list; - SHELL_VAR **vars; - - vars = map_over_funcs (visible_and_exported); - if (vars == 0) - return (char **)NULL; - - list = make_env_array_from_var_list (vars); - - free (vars); - return (list); -} - -/* Add ENVSTR to the end of the exported environment, EXPORT_ENV. */ -#define add_to_export_env(envstr,do_alloc) \ -do \ - { \ - if (export_env_index >= (export_env_size - 1)) \ - { \ - export_env_size += 16; \ - export_env = strvec_resize (export_env, export_env_size); \ - environ = export_env; \ - } \ - export_env[export_env_index++] = (do_alloc) ? savestring (envstr) : envstr; \ - export_env[export_env_index] = (char *)NULL; \ - } while (0) - -/* Add ASSIGN to EXPORT_ENV, or supercede a previous assignment in the - array with the same left-hand side. Return the new EXPORT_ENV. */ -char ** -add_or_supercede_exported_var (assign, do_alloc) - char *assign; - int do_alloc; -{ - register int i; - int equal_offset; - - equal_offset = assignment (assign, 0); - if (equal_offset == 0) - return (export_env); - - /* If this is a function, then only supersede the function definition. - We do this by including the `=() {' in the comparison, like - initialize_shell_variables does. */ - if (assign[equal_offset + 1] == '(' && - strncmp (assign + equal_offset + 2, ") {", 3) == 0) /* } */ - equal_offset += 4; - - for (i = 0; i < export_env_index; i++) - { - if (STREQN (assign, export_env[i], equal_offset + 1)) - { - free (export_env[i]); - export_env[i] = do_alloc ? savestring (assign) : assign; - return (export_env); - } - } - add_to_export_env (assign, do_alloc); - return (export_env); -} - -static void -add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, do_alloc, do_supercede) - char **temp_array; - int do_alloc, do_supercede; -{ - register int i; - - if (temp_array == 0) - return; - - for (i = 0; temp_array[i]; i++) - { - if (do_supercede) - export_env = add_or_supercede_exported_var (temp_array[i], do_alloc); - else - add_to_export_env (temp_array[i], do_alloc); - } - - free (temp_array); -} - -/* Make the environment array for the command about to be executed, if the - array needs making. Otherwise, do nothing. If a shell action could - change the array that commands receive for their environment, then the - code should `array_needs_making++'. - - The order to add to the array is: - temporary_env - list of var contexts whose head is shell_variables - shell_functions - - This is the shell variable lookup order. We add only new variable - names at each step, which allows local variables and variables in - the temporary environments to shadow variables in the global (or - any previous) scope. -*/ - -static int -n_shell_variables () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - int n; - - for (n = 0, vc = shell_variables; vc; vc = vc->down) - n += HASH_ENTRIES (vc->table); - return n; -} - -int -chkexport (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v && exported_p (v)) - { - array_needs_making = 1; - maybe_make_export_env (); - return 1; - } - return 0; -} - -void -maybe_make_export_env () -{ - register char **temp_array; - int new_size; - VAR_CONTEXT *tcxt; - - if (array_needs_making) - { - if (export_env) - strvec_flush (export_env); - - /* Make a guess based on how many shell variables and functions we - have. Since there will always be array variables, and array - variables are not (yet) exported, this will always be big enough - for the exported variables and functions. */ - new_size = n_shell_variables () + HASH_ENTRIES (shell_functions) + 1 + - HASH_ENTRIES (temporary_env); - if (new_size > export_env_size) - { - export_env_size = new_size; - export_env = strvec_resize (export_env, export_env_size); - environ = export_env; - } - export_env[export_env_index = 0] = (char *)NULL; - - /* Make a dummy variable context from the temporary_env, stick it on - the front of shell_variables, call make_var_export_array on the - whole thing to flatten it, and convert the list of SHELL_VAR *s - to the form needed by the environment. */ - if (temporary_env) - { - tcxt = new_var_context ((char *)NULL, 0); - tcxt->table = temporary_env; - tcxt->down = shell_variables; - } - else - tcxt = shell_variables; - - temp_array = make_var_export_array (tcxt); - if (temp_array) - add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, 0, 0); - - if (tcxt != shell_variables) - free (tcxt); - -#if defined (RESTRICTED_SHELL) - /* Restricted shells may not export shell functions. */ - temp_array = restricted ? (char **)0 : make_func_export_array (); -#else - temp_array = make_func_export_array (); -#endif - if (temp_array) - add_temp_array_to_env (temp_array, 0, 0); - - array_needs_making = 0; - } -} - -/* This is an efficiency hack. PWD and OLDPWD are auto-exported, so - we will need to remake the exported environment every time we - change directories. `_' is always put into the environment for - every external command, so without special treatment it will always - cause the environment to be remade. - - If there is no other reason to make the exported environment, we can - just update the variables in place and mark the exported environment - as no longer needing a remake. */ -void -update_export_env_inplace (env_prefix, preflen, value) - char *env_prefix; - int preflen; - char *value; -{ - char *evar; - - evar = (char *)xmalloc (STRLEN (value) + preflen + 1); - strcpy (evar, env_prefix); - if (value) - strcpy (evar + preflen, value); - export_env = add_or_supercede_exported_var (evar, 0); -} - -/* We always put _ in the environment as the name of this command. */ -void -put_command_name_into_env (command_name) - char *command_name; -{ - update_export_env_inplace ("_=", 2, command_name); -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Managing variable contexts */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -/* Allocate and return a new variable context with NAME and FLAGS. - NAME can be NULL. */ - -VAR_CONTEXT * -new_var_context (name, flags) - char *name; - int flags; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = (VAR_CONTEXT *)xmalloc (sizeof (VAR_CONTEXT)); - vc->name = name ? savestring (name) : (char *)NULL; - vc->scope = variable_context; - vc->flags = flags; - - vc->up = vc->down = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - vc->table = (HASH_TABLE *)NULL; - - return vc; -} - -/* Free a variable context and its data, including the hash table. Dispose - all of the variables. */ -void -dispose_var_context (vc) - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; -{ - FREE (vc->name); - - if (vc->table) - { - delete_all_variables (vc->table); - hash_dispose (vc->table); - } - - free (vc); -} - -/* Set VAR's scope level to the current variable context. */ -static int -set_context (var) - SHELL_VAR *var; -{ - return (var->context = variable_context); -} - -/* Make a new variable context with NAME and FLAGS and a HASH_TABLE of - temporary variables, and push it onto shell_variables. This is - for shell functions. */ -VAR_CONTEXT * -push_var_context (name, flags, tempvars) - char *name; - int flags; - HASH_TABLE *tempvars; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vc; - - vc = new_var_context (name, flags); - vc->table = tempvars; - if (tempvars) - { - /* Have to do this because the temp environment was created before - variable_context was incremented. */ - flatten (tempvars, set_context, (VARLIST *)NULL, 0); - vc->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - } - vc->down = shell_variables; - shell_variables->up = vc; - - return (shell_variables = vc); -} - -static void -push_func_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - if (tempvar_p (var) && (posixly_correct || (var->attributes & att_propagate))) - { - /* Make sure we have a hash table to store the variable in while it is - being propagated down to the global variables table. Create one if - we have to */ - if ((vc_isfuncenv (shell_variables) || vc_istempenv (shell_variables)) && shell_variables->table == 0) - shell_variables->table = hash_create (0); - /* XXX - should we set v->context here? */ - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), shell_variables->table, 0, 0); - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - var->attributes &= ~(att_tempvar|att_propagate); - else - shell_variables->flags |= VC_HASTMPVAR; - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - } - else - stupidly_hack_special_variables (var->name); /* XXX */ - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -/* Pop the top context off of VCXT and dispose of it, returning the rest of - the stack. */ -void -pop_var_context () -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *ret, *vcxt; - - vcxt = shell_variables; - if (vc_isfuncenv (vcxt) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("pop_var_context: head of shell_variables not a function context")); - return; - } - - if (ret = vcxt->down) - { - ret->up = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - shell_variables = ret; - if (vcxt->table) - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_func_var); - dispose_var_context (vcxt); - } - else - internal_error (_("pop_var_context: no global_variables context")); -} - -/* Delete the HASH_TABLEs for all variable contexts beginning at VCXT, and - all of the VAR_CONTEXTs except GLOBAL_VARIABLES. */ -void -delete_all_contexts (vcxt) - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *v, *t; - - for (v = vcxt; v != global_variables; v = t) - { - t = v->down; - dispose_var_context (v); - } - - delete_all_variables (global_variables->table); - shell_variables = global_variables; -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Pushing and Popping temporary variable scopes */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -VAR_CONTEXT * -push_scope (flags, tmpvars) - int flags; - HASH_TABLE *tmpvars; -{ - return (push_var_context ((char *)NULL, flags, tmpvars)); -} - -static void -push_exported_var (data) - PTR_T data; -{ - SHELL_VAR *var, *v; - - var = (SHELL_VAR *)data; - - /* If a temp var had its export attribute set, or it's marked to be - propagated, bind it in the previous scope before disposing it. */ - /* XXX - This isn't exactly right, because all tempenv variables have the - export attribute set. */ -#if 0 - if (exported_p (var) || (var->attributes & att_propagate)) -#else - if (tempvar_p (var) && exported_p (var) && (var->attributes & att_propagate)) -#endif - { - var->attributes &= ~att_tempvar; /* XXX */ - v = bind_variable_internal (var->name, value_cell (var), shell_variables->table, 0, 0); - if (shell_variables == global_variables) - var->attributes &= ~att_propagate; - v->attributes |= var->attributes; - } - else - stupidly_hack_special_variables (var->name); /* XXX */ - - dispose_variable (var); -} - -void -pop_scope (is_special) - int is_special; -{ - VAR_CONTEXT *vcxt, *ret; - - vcxt = shell_variables; - if (vc_istempscope (vcxt) == 0) - { - internal_error (_("pop_scope: head of shell_variables not a temporary environment scope")); - return; - } - - ret = vcxt->down; - if (ret) - ret->up = (VAR_CONTEXT *)NULL; - - shell_variables = ret; - - /* Now we can take care of merging variables in VCXT into set of scopes - whose head is RET (shell_variables). */ - FREE (vcxt->name); - if (vcxt->table) - { - if (is_special) - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_func_var); - else - hash_flush (vcxt->table, push_exported_var); - hash_dispose (vcxt->table); - } - free (vcxt); - - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now */ -} - -/* **************************************************************** */ -/* */ -/* Pushing and Popping function contexts */ -/* */ -/* **************************************************************** */ - -static WORD_LIST **dollar_arg_stack = (WORD_LIST **)NULL; -static int dollar_arg_stack_slots; -static int dollar_arg_stack_index; - -/* XXX - we might want to consider pushing and popping the `getopts' state - when we modify the positional parameters. */ -void -push_context (name, is_subshell, tempvars) - char *name; /* function name */ - int is_subshell; - HASH_TABLE *tempvars; -{ - if (is_subshell == 0) - push_dollar_vars (); - variable_context++; - push_var_context (name, VC_FUNCENV, tempvars); -} - -/* Only called when subshell == 0, so we don't need to check, and can - unconditionally pop the dollar vars off the stack. */ -void -pop_context () -{ - pop_dollar_vars (); - variable_context--; - pop_var_context (); - - sv_ifs ("IFS"); /* XXX here for now */ -} - -/* Save the existing positional parameters on a stack. */ -void -push_dollar_vars () -{ - if (dollar_arg_stack_index + 2 > dollar_arg_stack_slots) - { - dollar_arg_stack = (WORD_LIST **) - xrealloc (dollar_arg_stack, (dollar_arg_stack_slots += 10) - * sizeof (WORD_LIST *)); - } - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index++] = list_rest_of_args (); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; -} - -/* Restore the positional parameters from our stack. */ -void -pop_dollar_vars () -{ - if (!dollar_arg_stack || dollar_arg_stack_index == 0) - return; - - remember_args (dollar_arg_stack[--dollar_arg_stack_index], 1); - dispose_words (dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index]); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; - set_dollar_vars_unchanged (); -} - -void -dispose_saved_dollar_vars () -{ - if (!dollar_arg_stack || dollar_arg_stack_index == 0) - return; - - dispose_words (dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index]); - dollar_arg_stack[dollar_arg_stack_index] = (WORD_LIST *)NULL; -} - -/* Manipulate the special BASH_ARGV and BASH_ARGC variables. */ - -void -push_args (list) - WORD_LIST *list; -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) && defined (DEBUGGER) - SHELL_VAR *bash_argv_v, *bash_argc_v; - ARRAY *bash_argv_a, *bash_argc_a; - WORD_LIST *l; - arrayind_t i; - char *t; - - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGV", bash_argv_v, bash_argv_a); - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGC", bash_argc_v, bash_argc_a); - - for (l = list, i = 0; l; l = l->next, i++) - array_push (bash_argv_a, l->word->word); - - t = itos (i); - array_push (bash_argc_a, t); - free (t); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS && DEBUGGER */ -} - -/* Remove arguments from BASH_ARGV array. Pop top element off BASH_ARGC - array and use that value as the count of elements to remove from - BASH_ARGV. */ -void -pop_args () -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) && defined (DEBUGGER) - SHELL_VAR *bash_argv_v, *bash_argc_v; - ARRAY *bash_argv_a, *bash_argc_a; - ARRAY_ELEMENT *ce; - intmax_t i; - - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGV", bash_argv_v, bash_argv_a); - GET_ARRAY_FROM_VAR ("BASH_ARGC", bash_argc_v, bash_argc_a); - - ce = array_shift (bash_argc_a, 1, 0); - if (ce == 0 || legal_number (element_value (ce), &i) == 0) - i = 0; - - for ( ; i > 0; i--) - array_pop (bash_argv_a); - array_dispose_element (ce); -#endif /* ARRAY_VARS && DEBUGGER */ -} - -/************************************************* - * * - * Functions to manage special variables * - * * - *************************************************/ - -/* Extern declarations for variables this code has to manage. */ -extern int eof_encountered, eof_encountered_limit, ignoreeof; - -#if defined (READLINE) -extern int hostname_list_initialized; -#endif - -/* An alist of name.function for each special variable. Most of the - functions don't do much, and in fact, this would be faster with a - switch statement, but by the end of this file, I am sick of switch - statements. */ - -#define SET_INT_VAR(name, intvar) intvar = find_variable (name) != 0 - -/* This table will be sorted with qsort() the first time it's accessed. */ -struct name_and_function { - char *name; - sh_sv_func_t *function; -}; - -static struct name_and_function special_vars[] = { - { "BASH_COMPAT", sv_shcompat }, - { "BASH_XTRACEFD", sv_xtracefd }, - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) - { "CHILD_MAX", sv_childmax }, -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) -# if defined (STRICT_POSIX) - { "COLUMNS", sv_winsize }, -# endif - { "COMP_WORDBREAKS", sv_comp_wordbreaks }, -#endif - - { "FUNCNEST", sv_funcnest }, - - { "GLOBIGNORE", sv_globignore }, - -#if defined (HISTORY) - { "HISTCONTROL", sv_history_control }, - { "HISTFILESIZE", sv_histsize }, - { "HISTIGNORE", sv_histignore }, - { "HISTSIZE", sv_histsize }, - { "HISTTIMEFORMAT", sv_histtimefmt }, -#endif - -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) - { "HOME", sv_home }, -#endif - -#if defined (READLINE) - { "HOSTFILE", sv_hostfile }, -#endif - - { "IFS", sv_ifs }, - { "IGNOREEOF", sv_ignoreeof }, - - { "LANG", sv_locale }, - { "LC_ALL", sv_locale }, - { "LC_COLLATE", sv_locale }, - { "LC_CTYPE", sv_locale }, - { "LC_MESSAGES", sv_locale }, - { "LC_NUMERIC", sv_locale }, - { "LC_TIME", sv_locale }, - -#if defined (READLINE) && defined (STRICT_POSIX) - { "LINES", sv_winsize }, -#endif - - { "MAIL", sv_mail }, - { "MAILCHECK", sv_mail }, - { "MAILPATH", sv_mail }, - - { "OPTERR", sv_opterr }, - { "OPTIND", sv_optind }, - - { "PATH", sv_path }, - { "POSIXLY_CORRECT", sv_strict_posix }, - -#if defined (READLINE) - { "TERM", sv_terminal }, - { "TERMCAP", sv_terminal }, - { "TERMINFO", sv_terminal }, -#endif /* READLINE */ - - { "TEXTDOMAIN", sv_locale }, - { "TEXTDOMAINDIR", sv_locale }, - -#if defined (HAVE_TZSET) - { "TZ", sv_tz }, -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) && defined (BANG_HISTORY) - { "histchars", sv_histchars }, -#endif /* HISTORY && BANG_HISTORY */ - - { "ignoreeof", sv_ignoreeof }, - - { (char *)0, (sh_sv_func_t *)0 } -}; - -#define N_SPECIAL_VARS (sizeof (special_vars) / sizeof (special_vars[0]) - 1) - -static int -sv_compare (sv1, sv2) - struct name_and_function *sv1, *sv2; -{ - int r; - - if ((r = sv1->name[0] - sv2->name[0]) == 0) - r = strcmp (sv1->name, sv2->name); - return r; -} - -static inline int -find_special_var (name) - const char *name; -{ - register int i, r; - - for (i = 0; special_vars[i].name; i++) - { - r = special_vars[i].name[0] - name[0]; - if (r == 0) - r = strcmp (special_vars[i].name, name); - if (r == 0) - return i; - else if (r > 0) - /* Can't match any of rest of elements in sorted list. Take this out - if it causes problems in certain environments. */ - break; - } - return -1; -} - -/* The variable in NAME has just had its state changed. Check to see if it - is one of the special ones where something special happens. */ -void -stupidly_hack_special_variables (name) - char *name; -{ - static int sv_sorted = 0; - int i; - - if (sv_sorted == 0) /* shouldn't need, but it's fairly cheap. */ - { - qsort (special_vars, N_SPECIAL_VARS, sizeof (special_vars[0]), - (QSFUNC *)sv_compare); - sv_sorted = 1; - } - - i = find_special_var (name); - if (i != -1) - (*(special_vars[i].function)) (name); -} - -/* Special variables that need hooks to be run when they are unset as part - of shell reinitialization should have their sv_ functions run here. */ -void -reinit_special_variables () -{ -#if defined (READLINE) - sv_comp_wordbreaks ("COMP_WORDBREAKS"); -#endif - sv_globignore ("GLOBIGNORE"); - sv_opterr ("OPTERR"); -} - -void -sv_ifs (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable ("IFS"); - setifs (v); -} - -/* What to do just after the PATH variable has changed. */ -void -sv_path (name) - char *name; -{ - /* hash -r */ - phash_flush (); -} - -/* What to do just after one of the MAILxxxx variables has changed. NAME - is the name of the variable. This is called with NAME set to one of - MAIL, MAILCHECK, or MAILPATH. */ -void -sv_mail (name) - char *name; -{ - /* If the time interval for checking the files has changed, then - reset the mail timer. Otherwise, one of the pathname vars - to the users mailbox has changed, so rebuild the array of - filenames. */ - if (name[4] == 'C') /* if (strcmp (name, "MAILCHECK") == 0) */ - reset_mail_timer (); - else - { - free_mail_files (); - remember_mail_dates (); - } -} - -void -sv_funcnest (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - intmax_t num; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - funcnest_max = 0; - else if (legal_number (value_cell (v), &num) == 0) - funcnest_max = 0; - else - funcnest_max = num; -} - -/* What to do when GLOBIGNORE changes. */ -void -sv_globignore (name) - char *name; -{ - if (privileged_mode == 0) - setup_glob_ignore (name); -} - -#if defined (READLINE) -void -sv_comp_wordbreaks (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *sv; - - sv = find_variable (name); - if (sv == 0) - reset_completer_word_break_chars (); -} - -/* What to do just after one of the TERMxxx variables has changed. - If we are an interactive shell, then try to reset the terminal - information in readline. */ -void -sv_terminal (name) - char *name; -{ - if (interactive_shell && no_line_editing == 0) - rl_reset_terminal (get_string_value ("TERM")); -} - -void -sv_hostfile (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - clear_hostname_list (); - else - hostname_list_initialized = 0; -} - -#if defined (STRICT_POSIX) -/* In strict posix mode, we allow assignments to LINES and COLUMNS (and values - found in the initial environment) to override the terminal size reported by - the kernel. */ -void -sv_winsize (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - intmax_t xd; - int d; - - if (posixly_correct == 0 || interactive_shell == 0 || no_line_editing) - return; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0 || var_isnull (v)) - rl_reset_screen_size (); - else - { - if (legal_number (value_cell (v), &xd) == 0) - return; - winsize_assignment = 1; - d = xd; /* truncate */ - if (name[0] == 'L') /* LINES */ - rl_set_screen_size (d, -1); - else /* COLUMNS */ - rl_set_screen_size (-1, d); - winsize_assignment = 0; - } -} -#endif /* STRICT_POSIX */ -#endif /* READLINE */ - -/* Update the value of HOME in the export environment so tilde expansion will - work on cygwin. */ -#if defined (__CYGWIN__) -sv_home (name) - char *name; -{ - array_needs_making = 1; - maybe_make_export_env (); -} -#endif - -#if defined (HISTORY) -/* What to do after the HISTSIZE or HISTFILESIZE variables change. - If there is a value for this HISTSIZE (and it is numeric), then stifle - the history. Otherwise, if there is NO value for this variable, - unstifle the history. If name is HISTFILESIZE, and its value is - numeric, truncate the history file to hold no more than that many - lines. */ -void -sv_histsize (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - intmax_t num; - int hmax; - - temp = get_string_value (name); - - if (temp && *temp) - { - if (legal_number (temp, &num)) - { - hmax = num; - if (hmax < 0 && name[4] == 'S') - unstifle_history (); /* unstifle history if HISTSIZE < 0 */ - else if (name[4] == 'S') - { - stifle_history (hmax); - hmax = where_history (); - if (history_lines_this_session > hmax) - history_lines_this_session = hmax; - } - else if (hmax >= 0) /* truncate HISTFILE if HISTFILESIZE >= 0 */ - { - history_truncate_file (get_string_value ("HISTFILE"), hmax); - if (hmax <= history_lines_in_file) - history_lines_in_file = hmax; - } - } - } - else if (name[4] == 'S') - unstifle_history (); -} - -/* What to do after the HISTIGNORE variable changes. */ -void -sv_histignore (name) - char *name; -{ - setup_history_ignore (name); -} - -/* What to do after the HISTCONTROL variable changes. */ -void -sv_history_control (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - char *val; - int tptr; - - history_control = 0; - temp = get_string_value (name); - - if (temp == 0 || *temp == 0) - return; - - tptr = 0; - while (val = extract_colon_unit (temp, &tptr)) - { - if (STREQ (val, "ignorespace")) - history_control |= HC_IGNSPACE; - else if (STREQ (val, "ignoredups")) - history_control |= HC_IGNDUPS; - else if (STREQ (val, "ignoreboth")) - history_control |= HC_IGNBOTH; - else if (STREQ (val, "erasedups")) - history_control |= HC_ERASEDUPS; - - free (val); - } -} - -#if defined (BANG_HISTORY) -/* Setting/unsetting of the history expansion character. */ -void -sv_histchars (name) - char *name; -{ - char *temp; - - temp = get_string_value (name); - if (temp) - { - history_expansion_char = *temp; - if (temp[0] && temp[1]) - { - history_subst_char = temp[1]; - if (temp[2]) - history_comment_char = temp[2]; - } - } - else - { - history_expansion_char = '!'; - history_subst_char = '^'; - history_comment_char = '#'; - } -} -#endif /* BANG_HISTORY */ - -void -sv_histtimefmt (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - - if (v = find_variable (name)) - { - if (history_comment_char == 0) - history_comment_char = '#'; - } - history_write_timestamps = (v != 0); -} -#endif /* HISTORY */ - -#if defined (HAVE_TZSET) -void -sv_tz (name) - char *name; -{ - if (chkexport (name)) - tzset (); -} -#endif - -/* If the variable exists, then the value of it can be the number - of times we actually ignore the EOF. The default is small, - (smaller than csh, anyway). */ -void -sv_ignoreeof (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *tmp_var; - char *temp; - - eof_encountered = 0; - - tmp_var = find_variable (name); - ignoreeof = tmp_var != 0; - temp = tmp_var ? value_cell (tmp_var) : (char *)NULL; - if (temp) - eof_encountered_limit = (*temp && all_digits (temp)) ? atoi (temp) : 10; - set_shellopts (); /* make sure `ignoreeof' is/is not in $SHELLOPTS */ -} - -void -sv_optind (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - int s; - - tt = get_string_value ("OPTIND"); - if (tt && *tt) - { - s = atoi (tt); - - /* According to POSIX, setting OPTIND=1 resets the internal state - of getopt (). */ - if (s < 0 || s == 1) - s = 0; - } - else - s = 0; - getopts_reset (s); -} - -void -sv_opterr (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - - tt = get_string_value ("OPTERR"); - sh_opterr = (tt && *tt) ? atoi (tt) : 1; -} - -void -sv_strict_posix (name) - char *name; -{ - SET_INT_VAR (name, posixly_correct); - posix_initialize (posixly_correct); -#if defined (READLINE) - if (interactive_shell) - posix_readline_initialize (posixly_correct); -#endif /* READLINE */ - set_shellopts (); /* make sure `posix' is/is not in $SHELLOPTS */ -} - -void -sv_locale (name) - char *name; -{ - char *v; - int r; - - v = get_string_value (name); - if (name[0] == 'L' && name[1] == 'A') /* LANG */ - r = set_lang (name, v); - else - r = set_locale_var (name, v); /* LC_*, TEXTDOMAIN* */ - -#if 1 - if (r == 0 && posixly_correct) - last_command_exit_value = 1; -#endif -} - -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) -void -set_pipestatus_array (ps, nproc) - int *ps; - int nproc; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a; - ARRAY_ELEMENT *ae; - register int i; - char *t, tbuf[INT_STRLEN_BOUND(int) + 1]; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (v == 0) - v = make_new_array_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (array_p (v) == 0) - return; /* Do nothing if not an array variable. */ - a = array_cell (v); - - if (a == 0 || array_num_elements (a) == 0) - { - for (i = 0; i < nproc; i++) /* was ps[i] != -1, not i < nproc */ - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - return; - } - - /* Fast case */ - if (array_num_elements (a) == nproc && nproc == 1) - { - ae = element_forw (a->head); - free (element_value (ae)); - ae->value = itos (ps[0]); - } - else if (array_num_elements (a) <= nproc) - { - /* modify in array_num_elements members in place, then add */ - ae = a->head; - for (i = 0; i < array_num_elements (a); i++) - { - ae = element_forw (ae); - free (element_value (ae)); - ae->value = itos (ps[i]); - } - /* add any more */ - for ( ; i < nproc; i++) - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - } - else - { - /* deleting elements. it's faster to rebuild the array. */ - array_flush (a); - for (i = 0; ps[i] != -1; i++) - { - t = inttostr (ps[i], tbuf, sizeof (tbuf)); - array_insert (a, i, t); - } - } -} - -ARRAY * -save_pipestatus_array () -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a, *a2; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - if (v == 0 || array_p (v) == 0 || array_cell (v) == 0) - return ((ARRAY *)NULL); - - a = array_cell (v); - a2 = array_copy (array_cell (v)); - - return a2; -} - -void -restore_pipestatus_array (a) - ARRAY *a; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - ARRAY *a2; - - v = find_variable ("PIPESTATUS"); - /* XXX - should we still assign even if existing value is NULL? */ - if (v == 0 || array_p (v) == 0 || array_cell (v) == 0) - return; - - a2 = array_cell (v); - var_setarray (v, a); - - array_dispose (a2); -} -#endif - -void -set_pipestatus_from_exit (s) - int s; -{ -#if defined (ARRAY_VARS) - static int v[2] = { 0, -1 }; - - v[0] = s; - set_pipestatus_array (v, 1); -#endif -} - -void -sv_xtracefd (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - char *t, *e; - int fd; - FILE *fp; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - { - xtrace_reset (); - return; - } - - t = value_cell (v); - if (t == 0 || *t == 0) - xtrace_reset (); - else - { - fd = (int)strtol (t, &e, 10); - if (e != t && *e == '\0' && sh_validfd (fd)) - { - fp = fdopen (fd, "w"); - if (fp == 0) - internal_error (_("%s: %s: cannot open as FILE"), name, value_cell (v)); - else - xtrace_set (fd, fp); - } - else - internal_error (_("%s: %s: invalid value for trace file descriptor"), name, value_cell (v)); - } -} - -#define MIN_COMPAT_LEVEL 31 - -void -sv_shcompat (name) - char *name; -{ - SHELL_VAR *v; - char *val; - int tens, ones, compatval; - - v = find_variable (name); - if (v == 0) - { - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - val = value_cell (v); - if (val == 0 || *val == '\0') - { - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - /* Handle decimal-like compatibility version specifications: 4.2 */ - if (isdigit (val[0]) && val[1] == '.' && isdigit (val[2]) && val[3] == 0) - { - tens = val[0] - '0'; - ones = val[2] - '0'; - compatval = tens*10 + ones; - } - /* Handle integer-like compatibility version specifications: 42 */ - else if (isdigit (val[0]) && isdigit (val[1]) && val[2] == 0) - { - tens = val[0] - '0'; - ones = val[1] - '0'; - compatval = tens*10 + ones; - } - else - { -compat_error: - internal_error (_("%s: %s: compatibility value out of range"), name, val); - shell_compatibility_level = DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL; - set_compatibility_opts (); - return; - } - - if (compatval < MIN_COMPAT_LEVEL || compatval > DEFAULT_COMPAT_LEVEL) - goto compat_error; - - shell_compatibility_level = compatval; - set_compatibility_opts (); -} - -#if defined (JOB_CONTROL) -void -sv_childmax (name) - char *name; -{ - char *tt; - int s; - - tt = get_string_value (name); - s = (tt && *tt) ? atoi (tt) : 0; - set_maxchild (s); -} -#endif