• apply diff from mirbsdksh-1.11:
#ifdef DUP2_BROKEN
/* Ultrix systems like to preserve the close-on-exec flag */
‣ XXX we do #ifdef __ultrix here (imake-style) instead of mirtoconfing it
(but does anyone know of any other OS with the same problem? plus we’d
see it as we now know the symptoms)
• remove ultrix Build.hs warn=' but might work…' in the hope it DOES
from netbsd via oksh
we had the NULL pointer deref already fixed
• avoid a bogus not-setting the return value of edit.c:x_file_glob()
introduced by the above change in oksh
• escape ? as well (but not ] because that’s wrong)
reminded by cbiere@netbsd via oksh
• Unsetting a non-existent variable is not an error. See
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/unset.html
report from Arkadiusz Miskiewicz; fixed based on
http://cvs.pld-linux.org diff via oksh but modified slightly
• Be more smart waiting for input for non-interactive scripts. Fix
based on a diff from debian: see their bug#296446 (via oksh)
modified slightly
this also fixes cnuke@’s “mksh busy loop” problem, for which I never
received a bug report, but the Debian bug page contains a set of two
scripts to reproduce this before (and no longer after) this commit
• some KNF
• bump version
delivered to the process
• regression test by Clint Pachl, verified against Debian ksh93 by me
• place to fix it in the code discovered by Otto Moerbeek
Analysis:
internal_errorf(int, fmt, ...) was only a __dead function if the int argument
was non-0, which the Prevent probably was unable to follow. Change all uses of
internal_errorf(0, fmt, ...) to internal_warningf(fmt, ...); change the pro-
totype of internal_errorf() to internal_errorf(fmt, ...) and all remaining
uses remove the non-0 int argument; add __dead to internal_errorf() proto;
flesh out guts of internal_errorf() and internal_warningf() into a new local
function for optimisation purposes.
Some whitespace cleanup and dead code removal (return after internal_errorf(1))
helps to at least not get messages like
| sysop@odem2k:~/mb $ ./foo.sh
| : No such file or directory
| 127|sysop@odem2k:~/mb $ _
if you forgot to convert CR-LF into LF (of course only if the
kernel fails with ENOEXEC – an ENOENT would not help in these
cases), but of course other things will fail
do not start with a "#!shell" sequence” part of mksh(1) true again; this
was probably lost in mksh R21 or so when I decided/saw that our kernel
always parses shebang lines (code written myself, not taken from pdksh
again or MirBSD kernel, but verified against both)
• bom+shebang execution now works, no need setting EXECSHELL in the test
• bump version
and have it return an API-correct const char *
• enhance and stylify comments
• a little KNF and simplifications
• #ifdef DEBUG: replace strchr and strstr with ucstrchr and ucstrstr
that take and return a non-const char *, and fix the violations
• new cstrchr, cstrstr (take and give const char *)
• new vstrchr, vstrstr (take const or not, give boolean value)
• new afreechk(x) = afreechv(x,x) = if (x1) afree(x2, ATEMP)
• new ksh_isdash(str) = (str != NULL) && !strcmp(str, "-")
• replace the only use of strrchr with inlined code to shrink
• minor man page fixes
• Minix 3 signames are autogenerated with gcc
• rename strlfun.c to strlcpy.c since we don't do strlcat(3) anyway,
only strlcpy(3), and shorten it
• dot.mkshrc: move MKSH=… down to the export line
to not disturb the PS1 visual impression ☺
• dot.mkshrc: Lstripcom(): optimise
• bump version
¹) side effect from creating API-correct cstrchr, cstrstr, etc.
uses goto so it must be better ☻
tested on mirbsd-current via both Makefile and Build.sh
where we had 'noreturn' etc. but no '__noreturn__')
* Scan for __attribute__((bounded)) and __attribute__((used))
if we have __attribute__((noreturn))
* To be able to scan if certain attributes give warnings,
scan for -Werror with a simple programme which hopefully triggers none
* Convert __attribute__((unused)) to __unused, noreturn -> __dead
* Unify other attributes
* Clean up typography a little more
main.c: In function 'main':
main.c:208: warning: cast discards qualifiers from pointer target type
main.c:329: warning: cast discards qualifiers from pointer target type
no warnings at autoconf time left either; will take care of these two later
(might revisit changes from this commit), maybe change declararion for the
builtins to have their argv[] be const strings, and go through strict type
and qualifier checking again. this'll further improve stability.
XXX these changes might have introduced (more?) memory leaks,
XXX someone who knows about these tools should verify with
XXX automatic memory usage analysers (valgrind?)
still passes testsuite
return a value in case of an error (0 or the partial result, which
is the full result in case of trailing junk even), using it to rid
atoi() is possible, saving 9t 4d 1i
but sync RCS IDs for easier future adaption:
* Simplify savefd() by removing the "noclose" flag and make noclose
behavior the default. Almost all uses of savefd() are followed
by an implicit or explicit close.
* fix typos
* might as well make ksh_getopt() match real getopt(), ie. get rid of that
stupid EOF concept that was never true. adobriyan@gmail
* use SEEK_* for lseek()
* fix lint comments, no functional changes
* remove excessive optimization; from adobriyan@gmail
* only santa checks things twice; from adobriyan@gmail
* Interpret zero-filled numbers as decimal; PR 4213; from Alexey Dobriyan
according to SUSv3 and other modern shells (POSIX allows both).
Idea for the patch (add another lex state) from OpenBSD, but the
implementation differs slightly (and is better in quality).
Also add two testcases (/bin/sh passes both, old mksh only one),
and document the change in the manual page. Sync RCS IDs with OBSD.
sitory whose ChangeLog follows. mksh R21 is licenced under the MirOS li-
cence, shown in "sh.h", and a two-clause UCB-style licence by Marc Espie
as shown in "alloc.c".
This executable is a fair bit smaller and shorter than our /bin/ksh that
it is designed to eventually replace (as /bin/sh hardlink), with the old
/bin/ksh to completely vanish. It is still in beta testing though, and I
don't think it will compile on other operating systems.
mksh R21 is a completely new port, bringing together the OpenBSD-current
/bin/ksh, the MirOS-current /bin/ksh and the older mksh R20 (which still
was portable, ocvs-based).
- expat as discussed with bsiegert@ today on the phone
- ksh as announced earlier on the lists
* un-hook lib/libexpat from make includes
* remove /usr/include/{,open}ssl upgrade workaround from includes/Makefile
* nuke old bin/ksh
* nuke libexpat and xmlwf