• use DOWARN semantically correct
• support the Microsoft® C Compiler
• on Interix, disable msc's security checks, as it relies on
library functions not provided by Interix' libc (XXX mirtoconf this)
namely Dr. Robert “Pfeffer” Arnold (in this case, in FreeWRT), make
a half-completed attempt at implementing ${foo:2:3} substring evals
(of course, negatives can't work right now and that the numbers are
in face expressions is something I only read later too – this is to
be revisited later, but it's already late)
don't depend on this behaviour yet though
if someone wants to add more regression tests, feel free to…
| cpp.ansi: HP92453-01 B.11.31.01 HP C Preprocessor (ANSI)
| ccom: HP92453-01 B.11.X.36086-36089-36092.GP HP C Compiler
| /usr/ccs/bin/ld: 92453-07 linker linker ld B.11.60 070209
on
| mirbsd@td191:~/mksh $ uname -a
| HP-UX td191 B.11.31 U 9000/800 3397116299 unlimited-user license
resulting in
| Total failed: 1 (as expected)
| Total passed: 220
so I suppose it's no longer experimental on HP-UX… it also works on/with
| HP-UX td192 B.11.11 U 9000/800 1839940656 unlimited-user license
| gcc version 3.4.2
| Can't locate POSIX.pm in @INC…
and
| HP-UX td192 B.11.11 U 9000/800 1839940656 unlimited-user license
| cpp.ansi: HP92453-01 B.11.X.35175-35176.GP HP C Preprocessor (ANSI)
| ccom: HP92453-01 B.11.X.36086-36089-36092.GP HP C Compiler
| /usr/ccs/bin/ld: 92453-07 linker linker ld B.11.60 070209
and
| HP-UX td176 B.11.23 U ia64 1928826293 unlimited-user license
| Reading specs from /usr/local/lib/gcc/ia64-hp-hpux11.23/3.4.3/specs
| Total failed: 1 (as expected)
| Total passed: 219
still work to do for HP C on IA64
is a compromise anyway; these lunox people will have to live with that, too
many existing korn shell alike scripts depend on it even if not on the full
korn shell syntax availability (note: this doesn't mean using these in some
script with #!/bin/sh is ok)
problems. icc's warnings are bogus:
• it says int x_getc(void); is invalid (hm well, it may be static?)
• char c, d; d = c | 0x40; -> warning because (c | 0x40) is an int
(it apparently can't track value bounds)