# $MirOS: src/bin/mksh/check.t,v 1.23 2005/07/05 21:48:42 tg Exp $ # $OpenBSD: bksl-nl.t,v 1.2 2001/01/28 23:04:56 niklas Exp $ # $OpenBSD: history.t,v 1.5 2001/01/28 23:04:56 niklas Exp $ # $OpenBSD: read.t,v 1.3 2003/03/10 03:48:16 david Exp $ #- # You may also want to test IFS with the script at # http://www.research.att.com/~gsf/public/ifs.sh name: alias-1 description: Check that recursion is detected/avoided in aliases. stdin: alias fooBar=fooBar fooBar exit 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /fooBar.*not found.*/ --- name: alias-2 description: Check that recursion is detected/avoided in aliases. stdin: alias fooBar=barFoo alias barFoo=fooBar fooBar barFoo exit 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /fooBar.*not found.*\n.*barFoo.*not found/ --- name: alias-3 description: Check that recursion is detected/avoided in aliases. stdin: alias Echo='echo ' alias fooBar=barFoo alias barFoo=fooBar Echo fooBar unalias barFoo Echo fooBar expected-stdout: fooBar barFoo --- name: alias-4 description: Check that alias expansion isn't done on keywords (in keyword postitions). stdin: alias Echo='echo ' alias while=While while false; do echo hi ; done Echo while expected-stdout: While --- name: alias-5 description: Check that alias expansion done after alias with trailing space. stdin: alias Echo='echo ' alias foo='bar stuff ' alias bar='Bar1 Bar2 ' alias stuff='Stuff' alias blah='Blah' Echo foo blah expected-stdout: Bar1 Bar2 Stuff Blah --- name: alias-6 description: Check that alias expansion done after alias with trailing space. stdin: alias Echo='echo ' alias foo='bar bar' alias bar='Bar ' alias blah=Blah Echo foo blah expected-stdout: Bar Bar Blah --- name: alias-7 description: Check that alias expansion done after alias with trailing space after a keyword. stdin: alias X='case ' alias Y=Z X Y in 'Y') echo is y ;; Z) echo is z ; esac expected-stdout: is z --- name: alias-8 description: Check that newlines in an alias don't cause the command to be lost. stdin: alias foo=' echo hi echo there ' foo expected-stdout: hi there --- name: arith-lazy-1 description: Check that only one side of ternary operator is evaluated stdin: x=i+=2 y=j+=2 typeset -i i=1 j=1 echo $((1 ? 20 : (x+=2))) echo $i,$x echo $((0 ? (y+=2) : 30)) echo $j,$y expected-stdout: 20 1,i+=2 30 1,j+=2 --- name: arith-lazy-2 description: Check that assignments not done on non-evaluated side of ternary operator stdin: x=i+=2 y=j+=2 typeset -i i=1 j=1 echo $((1 ? 20 : (x+=2))) echo $i,$x echo $((0 ? (y+=2) : 30)) echo $i,$y expected-stdout: 20 1,i+=2 30 1,j+=2 --- name: arith-ternary-prec-1 description: Check precidance of ternary operator vs assignment stdin: typeset -i x=2 y=$((1 ? 20 : x+=2)) expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*:.*1 \? 20 : x\+=2.*lvalue.*\n$/ --- name: arith-ternary-prec-2 description: Check precidance of ternary operator vs assignment stdin: typeset -i x=2 echo $((0 ? x+=2 : 20)) expected-stdout: 20 --- name: arith-div-assoc-1 description: Check associativity of division operator stdin: echo $((20 / 2 / 2)) expected-stdout: 5 --- name: arith-assop-assoc-1 description: Check associativity of assignment-operator operator stdin: typeset -i i=1 j=2 k=3 echo $((i += j += k)) echo $i,$j,$k expected-stdout: 6 6,5,3 --- name: bksl-nl-ign-1 description: Check that \newline is not collasped after # stdin: echo hi #there \ echo folks expected-stdout: hi folks --- name: bksl-nl-ign-2 description: Check that \newline is not collasped inside single quotes stdin: echo 'hi \ there' echo folks expected-stdout: hi \ there folks --- name: bksl-nl-ign-3 description: Check that \newline is not collasped inside single quotes stdin: cat << \EOF hi \ there EOF expected-stdout: hi \ there --- name: blsk-nl-ign-4 description: Check interaction of aliases, single quotes and here-documents with backslash-newline (don't know what posix has to say about this) stdin: a=2 alias x='echo hi cat << "EOF" foo\ bar some' x more\ stuff$a EOF expected-stdout: hi foo\ bar some more\ stuff$a --- name: blsk-nl-ign-5 description: Check what happens with backslash at end of input (the old bourne shell trashes them; so do we) stdin: ! echo `echo foo\\`bar echo hi\ expected-stdout: foobar hi --- # # Places \newline should be collapsed # name: bksl-nl-1 description: Check that \newline is collasped before, in the middle of, and after words stdin: \ echo hi\ There, \ folks expected-stdout: hiThere, folks --- name: bksl-nl-2 description: Check that \newline is collasped in $ sequences (ksh93 fails this) stdin: a=12 ab=19 echo $\ a echo $a\ b echo $\ {a} echo ${a\ b} echo ${ab\ } expected-stdout: 12 19 12 19 19 --- name: bksl-nl-3 description: Check that \newline is collasped in $(..) and `...` sequences (ksh93 fails this) stdin: echo $\ (echo foobar1) echo $(\ echo foobar2) echo $(echo foo\ bar3) echo $(echo foobar4\ ) echo ` echo stuff1` echo `echo st\ uff2` expected-stdout: foobar1 foobar2 foobar3 foobar4 stuff1 stuff2 --- name: bksl-nl-4 description: Check that \newline is collasped in $((..)) sequences (ksh93 fails this) stdin: echo $\ ((1+2)) echo $(\ (1+2+3)) echo $((\ 1+2+3+4)) echo $((1+\ 2+3+4+5)) echo $((1+2+3+4+5+6)\ ) expected-stdout: 3 6 10 15 21 --- name: bksl-nl-5 description: Check that \newline is collasped in double quoted strings stdin: echo "\ hi" echo "foo\ bar" echo "folks\ " expected-stdout: hi foobar folks --- name: bksl-nl-6 description: Check that \newline is collasped in here document delimiters (ksh93 fails second part of this) stdin: a=12 cat << EO\ F a=$a foo\ bar EOF cat << E_O_F foo E_O_\ F echo done expected-stdout: a=12 foobar foo done --- name: bksl-nl-7 description: Check that \newline is collasped in double-quoted here-document delimiter. stdin: a=12 cat << "EO\ F" a=$a foo\ bar EOF echo done expected-stdout: a=$a foo\ bar done --- name: bksl-nl-8 description: Check that \newline is collasped in various 2+ character tokens delimiter. (ksh93 fails this) stdin: echo hi &\ & echo there echo foo |\ | echo bar cat <\ < EOF stuff EOF cat <\ <\ - EOF more stuff EOF cat <<\ EOF abcdef EOF echo hi >\ > /dev/null echo $? i=1 case $i in (\ x|\ 1\ ) echo hi;\ ; (*) echo oops esac expected-stdout: hi there foo stuff more stuff abcdef 0 hi --- name: blsk-nl-9 description: Check that \ at the end of an alias is collapsed when followed by a newline (don't know what posix has to say about this) stdin: alias x='echo hi\' x echo there expected-stdout: hiecho there --- name: blsk-nl-10 description: Check that \newline in a keyword is collapsed stdin: i\ f true; then\ echo pass; el\ se echo fail; fi expected-stdout: pass --- # # Places \newline should be collapsed (ksh extensions) # name: blsk-nl-ksh-1 description: Check that \newline is collapsed in extended globbing (ksh93 fails this) stdin: xxx=foo case $xxx in (f*\ (\ o\ )\ ) echo ok ;; *) echo bad esac expected-stdout: ok --- name: blsk-nl-ksh-2 description: Check that \newline is collapsed in ((...)) expressions (ksh93 fails this) stdin: i=1 (\ (\ i=i+2\ )\ ) echo $i expected-stdout: 3 --- name: break-1 description: See if break breaks out of loops stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; break; echo bad-$i; done echo end-1 for i in a b c; do echo $i; break 1; echo bad-$i; done echo end-2 for i in a b c; do for j in x y z; do echo $i:$j break echo bad-$i done echo end-$i done echo end-3 expected-stdout: a end-1 a end-2 a:x end-a b:x end-b c:x end-c end-3 --- name: break-2 description: See if break breaks out of nested loops stdin: for i in a b c; do for j in x y z; do echo $i:$j break 2 echo bad-$i done echo end-$i done echo end expected-stdout: a:x end --- name: break-3 description: What if break used outside of any loops (ksh88,ksh93 don't print error messages here) stdin: break expected-stderr-pattern: /.*break.*/ --- name: break-4 description: What if break N used when only N-1 loops (ksh88,ksh93 don't print error messages here) stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; break 2; echo bad-$i; done echo end expected-stdout: a end expected-stderr-pattern: /.*break.*/ --- name: break-5 description: Error if break argument isn't a number stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; break abc; echo more-$i; done echo end expected-stdout: a expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*break.*/ --- name: continue-1 description: See if continue continues loops stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; continue; echo bad-$i ; done echo end-1 for i in a b c; do echo $i; continue 1; echo bad-$i; done echo end-2 for i in a b c; do for j in x y z; do echo $i:$j continue echo bad-$i-$j done echo end-$i done echo end-3 expected-stdout: a b c end-1 a b c end-2 a:x a:y a:z end-a b:x b:y b:z end-b c:x c:y c:z end-c end-3 --- name: continue-2 description: See if continue breaks out of nested loops stdin: for i in a b c; do for j in x y z; do echo $i:$j continue 2 echo bad-$i-$j done echo end-$i done echo end expected-stdout: a:x b:x c:x end --- name: continue-3 description: What if continue used outside of any loops (ksh88,ksh93 don't print error messages here) stdin: continue expected-stderr-pattern: /.*continue.*/ --- name: continue-4 description: What if continue N used when only N-1 loops (ksh88,ksh93 don't print error messages here) stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; continue 2; echo bad-$i; done echo end expected-stdout: a b c end expected-stderr-pattern: /.*continue.*/ --- name: continue-5 description: Error if continue argument isn't a number stdin: for i in a b c; do echo $i; continue abc; echo more-$i; done echo end expected-stdout: a expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*continue.*/ --- name: cd-history description: Test someone's CD history package (uses arrays) stdin: # go to known place before doing anything cd / alias cd=_cd function _cd { typeset -i cdlen i typeset t if [ $# -eq 0 ] then set -- $HOME fi if [ "$CDHISTFILE" -a -r "$CDHISTFILE" ] # if directory history exists then typeset CDHIST i=-1 while read -r t # read directory history file do CDHIST[i=i+1]=$t done <$CDHISTFILE fi if [ "${CDHIST[0]}" != "$PWD" -a "$PWD" != "" ] then _cdins # insert $PWD into cd history fi cdlen=${#CDHIST[*]} # number of elements in history case "$@" in -) # cd to new dir if [ "$OLDPWD" = "" ] && ((cdlen>1)) then 'print' ${CDHIST[1]} 'cd' ${CDHIST[1]} _pwd else 'cd' $@ _pwd fi ;; -l) # print directory list typeset -R3 num ((i=cdlen)) while (((i=i-1)>=0)) do num=$i 'print' "$num ${CDHIST[i]}" done return ;; -[0-9]|-[0-9][0-9]) # cd to dir in list if (((i=${1#-})=cdlen)) then 'cd' $@ _pwd fi ;; *) # cd to new dir 'cd' $@ _pwd ;; esac _cdins # insert $PWD into cd history if [ "$CDHISTFILE" ] then cdlen=${#CDHIST[*]} # number of elements in history i=0 while ((i$CDHISTFILE fi } function _cdins # insert $PWD into cd history { # meant to be called only by _cd typeset -i i ((i=0)) while ((i<${#CDHIST[*]})) # see if dir is already in list do if [ "${CDHIST[$i]}" = "$PWD" ] then break fi ((i=i+1)) done if ((i>22)) # limit max size of list then i=22 fi while (((i=i-1)>=0)) # bump old dirs in list do CDHIST[i+1]=${CDHIST[i]} done CDHIST[0]=$PWD # insert new directory in list } function _pwd { if [ -n "$ECD" ] then pwd 1>&6 fi } # Start of test cd /tmp cd /bin cd /etc cd - cd -2 cd -l expected-stdout: /bin /tmp 3 / 2 /etc 1 /bin 0 /tmp --- name: env-prompt description: Check that prompt not printed when processing ENV env-setup: !ENV=./foo! file-setup: file 644 "foo" XXX=_ PS1=X false && echo hmmm arguments: !-i! stdin: echo hi${XXX}there expected-stdout: hi_there expected-stderr: ! XX --- name: eglob-bad-1 description: Check that globbing isn't done when glob has syntax error file-setup: file 644 "abcx" file-setup: file 644 "abcz" file-setup: file 644 "bbc" stdin: echo !([*)* echo +(a|b[)* expected-stdout: !([*)* +(a|b[)* --- name: eglob-bad-2 description: Check that globbing isn't done when glob has syntax error (at&t ksh fails this test) file-setup: file 644 "abcx" file-setup: file 644 "abcz" file-setup: file 644 "bbc" stdin: echo [a*(]*)z expected-stdout: [a*(]*)z --- name: eglob-infinite-plus description: Check that shell doesn't go into infinite loop expanding +(...) expressions. file-setup: file 644 "abc" time-limit: 3 stdin: echo +()c echo +()x echo +(*)c echo +(*)x expected-stdout: +()c +()x abc +(*)x --- name: eglob-subst-1 description: Check that eglobbing isn't done on substitution results file-setup: file 644 "abc" stdin: x='@(*)' echo $x expected-stdout: @(*) --- name: eglob-nomatch-1 description: Check that the pattern doesn't match stdin: echo 1: no-file+(a|b)stuff echo 2: no-file+(a*(c)|b)stuff echo 3: no-file+((((c)))|b)stuff expected-stdout: 1: no-file+(a|b)stuff 2: no-file+(a*(c)|b)stuff 3: no-file+((((c)))|b)stuff --- name: eglob-match-1 description: Check that the pattern matches correctly file-setup: file 644 "abd" file-setup: file 644 "acd" file-setup: file 644 "abac" stdin: echo 1: a+(b|c)d echo 2: a!(@(b|B))d echo 3: *(a(b|c)) # (...|...) can be used within X(..) echo 4: a[b*(foo|bar)]d # patterns not special inside [...] expected-stdout: 1: abd acd 2: acd 3: abac 4: abd --- name: eglob-case-1 description: Simple negation tests stdin: case foo in !(foo|bar)) echo yes;; *) echo no;; esac case bar in !(foo|bar)) echo yes;; *) echo no;; esac expected-stdout: no no --- name: eglob-case-2 description: Simple kleene tests stdin: case foo in *(a|b[)) echo yes;; *) echo no;; esac case foo in *(a|b[)|f*) echo yes;; *) echo no;; esac case '*(a|b[)' in *(a|b[)) echo yes;; *) echo no;; esac expected-stdout: no yes yes --- name: eglob-trim-1 description: Eglobing in trim expressions... (at&t ksh fails this - docs say # matches shortest string, ## matches longest...) stdin: x=abcdef echo 1: ${x#a|abc} echo 2: ${x##a|abc} echo 3: ${x%def|f} echo 4: ${x%%f|def} expected-stdout: 1: bcdef 2: def 3: abcde 4: abc --- name: eglob-trim-2 description: Check eglobing works in trims... stdin: x=abcdef echo 1: ${x#*(a|b)cd} echo 2: "${x#*(a|b)cd}" echo 3: ${x#"*(a|b)cd"} echo 4: ${x#a(b|c)} expected-stdout: 1: ef 2: ef 3: abcdef 4: cdef --- name: glob-bad-1 description: Check that globbing isn't done when glob has syntax error file-setup: dir 755 "[x" file-setup: file 644 "[x/foo" stdin: echo [* echo *[x echo [x/* expected-stdout: [* *[x [x/foo --- name: glob-bad-2 description: Check that symbolic links aren't stat()'d file-setup: dir 755 "dir" file-setup: symlink 644 "dir/abc" non-existent-file stdin: echo d*/* echo d*/abc expected-stdout: dir/abc dir/abc --- name: glob-range-1 description: Test range matching file-setup: file 644 ".bc" file-setup: file 644 "abc" file-setup: file 644 "bbc" file-setup: file 644 "cbc" file-setup: file 644 "-bc" stdin: echo [ab-]* echo [-ab]* echo [!-ab]* echo [!ab]* echo []ab]* expected-stdout: -bc abc bbc -bc abc bbc cbc -bc cbc abc bbc --- name: glob-range-2 description: Test range matching (at&t ksh fails this; POSIX says invalid) file-setup: file 644 "abc" stdin: echo [a--]* expected-stdout: [a--]* --- name: glob-range-3 description: Check that globbing matches the right things... # breaks on Mac OSX (probably UTF-8 issue) category: !os:darwin file-setup: file 644 "aÂc" stdin: echo a[Á-Ú]* expected-stdout: aÂc --- name: glob-range-4 description: Results unspecified according to POSIX file-setup: file 644 ".bc" stdin: echo [a.]* expected-stdout: [a.]* --- name: glob-range-5 description: Results unspecified according to POSIX (at&t ksh treats this like [a-cc-e]*) file-setup: file 644 "abc" file-setup: file 644 "bbc" file-setup: file 644 "cbc" file-setup: file 644 "dbc" file-setup: file 644 "ebc" file-setup: file 644 "-bc" stdin: echo [a-c-e]* expected-stdout: -bc abc bbc cbc ebc --- name: heredoc-1 description: Check ordering/content of redundent here documents. stdin: cat << EOF1 << EOF2 hi EOF1 there EOF2 expected-stdout: there --- name: heredoc-2 description: Check quoted here-doc is protected. stdin: a=foo cat << 'EOF' hi\ there$a stuff EO\ F EOF expected-stdout: hi\ there$a stuff EO\ F --- name: heredoc-3 description: Check that newline isn't needed after heredoc-delimiter marker. stdin: ! cat << EOF hi there EOF expected-stdout: hi there --- name: heredoc-4 description: Check that an error occurs if the heredoc-delimiter is missing. stdin: ! cat << EOF hi there expected-exit: e > 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*/ --- name: heredoc-5 description: Check that backslash quotes a $, ` and \ and kills a \newline stdin: a=BAD b=ok cat << EOF h\${a}i h\\${b}i th\`echo not-run\`ere th\\`echo is-run`ere fol\\ks more\\ last \ line EOF expected-stdout: h${a}i h\oki th`echo not-run`ere th\is-runere fol\ks more\ last line --- name: heredoc-6 description: Check that \newline in initial here-delim word doesn't imply a quoted here-doc. stdin: a=i cat << EO\ F h$a there EOF expected-stdout: hi there --- name: heredoc-7 description: Check that double quoted $ expressions in here delimiters are not expanded and match the delimiter. POSIX says only quote removal is applied to the delimiter. stdin: a=b cat << "E$a" hi h$a hb E$a echo done expected-stdout: hi h$a hb done --- name: heredoc-8 description: Check that double quoted escaped $ expressions in here delimiters are not expanded and match the delimiter. POSIX says only quote removal is applied to the delimiter (\ counts as a quote). stdin: a=b cat << "E\$a" hi h$a h\$a hb h\b E$a echo done expected-stdout: hi h$a h\$a hb h\b done --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-1 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in simple command. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' cat <<- EOF hi EOF for i in a b ; do cat <<- EOF more EOF done ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: hi more more Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-2 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in function, multiple calls to function. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' foo() { cat <<- EOF hi EOF } foo foo ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: hi hi Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-3 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in function in loop, multiple calls to function. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' foo() { cat <<- EOF hi EOF } for i in a b; do foo foo() { cat <<- EOF folks $i EOF } done foo ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: hi folks b folks b Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-4 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Backgrounded simple command with here doc stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' cat <<- EOF & hi EOF ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: hi Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-5 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Backgrounded subshell command with here doc stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' ( sleep 1 # so parent exits echo A cat <<- EOF hi EOF echo B ) & ' & sleep 2 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: A hi B Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-6 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in pipeline. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' cat <<- EOF | sed "s/hi/HI/" hi EOF ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: HI Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-7 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in backgrounded pipeline. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD eval ' cat <<- EOF | sed 's/hi/HI/' & hi EOF ' & sleep 1 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: HI Left overs: * --- name: heredoc-tmpfile-8 description: Check that heredoc temp files aren't removed too soon or too late. Heredoc in function, backgrounded call to function. stdin: TMPDIR=$PWD # Background eval so main shell doesn't do parsing eval ' foo() { cat <<- EOF hi EOF } foo # sleep so eval can die (sleep 1; foo) & (sleep 1; foo) & foo ' & sleep 2 echo Left overs: * expected-stdout: hi hi hi hi Left overs: * --- name: history-basic description: See if we can test history at all arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo hi fc -l expected-stdout: hi 1 echo hi expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-e-minus-1 description: Check if more recent command is executed arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo hi echo there fc -e - expected-stdout: hi there there expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo there\nX*$/ --- name: history-e-minus-2 description: Check that repeated command is printed before command is re-executed. arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: exec 2>&1 echo hi echo there fc -e - expected-stdout-pattern: /X*hi\nX*there\nX*echo there\nthere\nX*/ expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-e-minus-3 description: fc -e - fails when there is no history (ksh93 has a bug that causes this to fail) (ksh88 loops on this) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: fc -e - echo ok expected-stdout: ok expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*.*:.*history.*\nX*$/ --- name: history-e-minus-4 description: Check if "fc -e -" command output goes to stdout. arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc fc -e - | (read x; echo "A $x") echo ok expected-stdout: abc A abc ok expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo abc\nX*/ --- name: history-e-minus-5 description: fc is replaced in history by new command. arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def echo ghi jkl fc -e - echo fc -l 2 4 expected-stdout: abc def ghi jkl ghi jkl 2 echo ghi jkl 3 echo ghi jkl 4 fc -l 2 4 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo ghi jkl\nX*$/ --- name: history-list-1 description: List lists correct range (ksh88 fails 'cause it lists the fc command) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 fc -l -- -2 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 2 echo line 2 3 echo line 3 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-2 description: Lists oldest history if given pre-historic number (ksh93 has a bug that causes this to fail) (ksh88 fails 'cause it lists the fc command) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 fc -l -- -40 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 1 echo line 1 2 echo line 2 3 echo line 3 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-3 description: Can give number 'options' to fc arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 fc -l -3 -2 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 2 echo line 2 3 echo line 3 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-4 description: -1 refers to previous command arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 fc -l -1 -1 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 4 echo line 4 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-5 description: List command stays in history arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 fc -l -1 -1 fc -l -2 -1 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 4 echo line 4 4 echo line 4 5 fc -l -1 -1 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-6 description: HISTSIZE limits about of history kept. (ksh88 fails 'cause it lists the fc command) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file!HISTSIZE=3! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 echo line 5 fc -l expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 line 5 4 echo line 4 5 echo line 5 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-7 description: fc allows too old/new errors in range specification arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file!HISTSIZE=3! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 echo line 5 fc -l 1 30 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 line 5 4 echo line 4 5 echo line 5 6 fc -l 1 30 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-r-1 description: test -r flag in history arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 echo line 5 fc -l -r 2 4 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 line 5 4 echo line 4 3 echo line 3 2 echo line 2 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-r-2 description: If first is newer than last, -r is implied. arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 echo line 5 fc -l 4 2 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 line 5 4 echo line 4 3 echo line 3 2 echo line 2 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-list-r-3 description: If first is newer than last, -r is cancelled. arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 echo line 3 echo line 4 echo line 5 fc -l -r 4 2 expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 line 3 line 4 line 5 2 echo line 2 3 echo line 3 4 echo line 4 expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*$/ --- name: history-subst-1 description: Basic substitution arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def echo ghi jkl fc -e - abc=AB 'echo a' expected-stdout: abc def ghi jkl AB def expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo AB def\nX*$/ --- name: history-subst-2 description: Does subst find previous command? arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def echo ghi jkl fc -e - jkl=XYZQRT 'echo g' expected-stdout: abc def ghi jkl ghi XYZQRT expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo ghi XYZQRT\nX*$/ --- name: history-subst-3 description: Does subst find previous command when no arguments given arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def echo ghi jkl fc -e - jkl=XYZQRT expected-stdout: abc def ghi jkl ghi XYZQRT expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo ghi XYZQRT\nX*$/ --- name: history-subst-4 description: Global substitutions work (ksh88 and ksh93 do not have -g option) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def asjj sadjhasdjh asdjhasd fc -e - -g a=FooBAR expected-stdout: abc def asjj sadjhasdjh asdjhasd FooBARbc def FooBARsjj sFooBARdjhFooBARsdjh FooBARsdjhFooBARsd expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo FooBARbc def FooBARsjj sFooBARdjhFooBARsdjh FooBARsdjhFooBARsd\nX*$/ --- name: history-subst-5 description: Make sure searches don't find current (fc) command (ksh88/ksh93 don't have the ? prefix thing so they fail this test) arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def echo ghi jkl fc -e - abc=AB \?abc expected-stdout: abc def ghi jkl AB def expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo AB def\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-1-old description: Basic (ed) editing works (assumes you have generic ed editor that prints no prompts). This is for oldish ed(1) which write the character count to stdout. Found on MS Interix/SFU 3.5 and Mac OSX 10.4 "Tiger". category: os:interix,os:darwin,os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def fc echo s/abc/FOOBAR/ w q expected-stdout: abc def 13 16 FOOBAR def expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo FOOBAR def\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-2-old description: Correct command is edited when number given category: os:interix,os:darwin,os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 is here echo line 3 echo line 4 fc 2 s/is here/is changed/ w q expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 is here line 3 line 4 20 23 line 2 is changed expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo line 2 is changed\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-3-old description: Newly created multi line commands show up as single command in history. (NOTE: adjusted for COMPLEX HISTORY compile time option) (ksh88 fails 'cause it lists the fc command) category: os:interix,os:darwin,os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def fc echo s/abc/FOOBAR/ $a echo a new line . w q fc -l expected-stdout: abc def 13 32 FOOBAR def a new line 1 echo abc def 2 echo FOOBAR def 3 echo a new line expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*echo FOOBAR def\necho a new line\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-1 description: Basic (ed) editing works (assumes you have generic ed editor that prints no prompts). This is for newish ed(1) and stderr. # we don't have persistent history on Solaris (no flock) category: !os:solaris,!os:interix,!os:darwin,!os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def fc echo s/abc/FOOBAR/ w q expected-stdout: abc def FOOBAR def expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*13\n16\necho FOOBAR def\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-2 description: Correct command is edited when number given category: !os:solaris,!os:interix,!os:darwin,!os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo line 1 echo line 2 is here echo line 3 echo line 4 fc 2 s/is here/is changed/ w q expected-stdout: line 1 line 2 is here line 3 line 4 line 2 is changed expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*20\n23\necho line 2 is changed\nX*$/ --- name: history-ed-3 description: Newly created multi line commands show up as single command in history. category: !os:solaris,!os:interix,!os:darwin,!os:freebsd arguments: !-i! env-setup: !ENV=./Env!HISTFILE=hist.file! file-setup: file 644 "Env" PS1=X stdin: echo abc def fc echo s/abc/FOOBAR/ $a echo a new line . w q fc -l expected-stdout: abc def FOOBAR def a new line 1 echo abc def 2 echo FOOBAR def 3 echo a new line expected-stderr-pattern: /^X*13\n32\necho FOOBAR def\necho a new line\nX*$/ --- name: IFS-space-1 description: Simple test, default IFS stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } set -- A B C showargs 1 $* showargs 2 "$*" showargs 3 $@ showargs 4 "$@" expected-stdout: <1> <2> <3> <4> --- name: IFS-colon-1 description: Simple test, IFS=: stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS=: set -- A B C showargs 1 $* showargs 2 "$*" showargs 3 $@ showargs 4 "$@" expected-stdout: <1> <2> <3> <4> --- name: IFS-null-1 description: Simple test, IFS="" stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="" set -- A B C showargs 1 $* showargs 2 "$*" showargs 3 $@ showargs 4 "$@" expected-stdout: <1> <2> <3> <4> --- name: IFS-space-colon-1 description: Simple test, IFS=: stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" set -- showargs 1 $* showargs 2 "$*" showargs 3 $@ showargs 4 "$@" showargs 5 : "$@" expected-stdout: <1> <2> <> <3> <4> <5> <:> --- name: IFS-space-colon-2 description: Simple test, IFS=: At&t ksh fails this, POSIX says the test is correct. stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" set -- showargs :"$@" expected-stdout: <:> --- name: IFS-space-colon-3 description: Simple test, IFS=: pdksh fails both of these tests stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" x= set -- showargs "$x$@" showargs "$@$x" expected-fail: yes expected-stdout: <> <> --- name: IFS-space-colon-4 description: Simple test, IFS=: stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" set -- showargs "$@$@" expected-stdout: --- name: IFS-space-colon-5 description: Simple test, IFS=: Don't know what POSIX thinks of this. at&t ksh does not do this. stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" set -- showargs "${@:-}" expected-stdout: <> --- name: IFS-subst-1 description: Simple test, IFS=: stdin: showargs() { for i; do echo -n " <$i>"; done; echo; } IFS="$IFS:" x=":b: :" echo -n '1:'; for i in $x ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo echo -n '2:'; for i in :b:: ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo showargs 3 $x showargs 4 :b:: x="a:b:" echo -n '5:'; for i in $x ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo showargs 6 $x x="a::c" echo -n '7:'; for i in $x ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo showargs 8 $x echo -n '9:'; for i in ${FOO-`echo -n h:i`th:ere} ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo showargs 10 ${FOO-`echo -n h:i`th:ere} showargs 11 "${FOO-`echo -n h:i`th:ere}" x=" A : B::D" echo -n '12:'; for i in $x ; do echo -n " [$i]" ; done ; echo showargs 13 $x expected-stdout: 1: [] [b] [] 2: [:b::] <3> <> <> <4> <:b::> 5: [a] [b] <6> 7: [a] [] [c] <8> <> 9: [h] [ith] [ere] <10> <11> 12: [A] [B] [] [D] <13> <> --- name: integer-base-err-1 description: Can't have 0 base (causes shell to exit) expected-exit: e != 0 stdin: typeset -i i i=3 i=0#4 echo $i expected-stderr-pattern: /^.*:.*0#4.*\n$/ --- name: integer-base-err-2 description: Can't have multiple bases in a 'constant' (causes shell to exit) (ksh88 fails this test) expected-exit: e != 0 stdin: typeset -i i i=3 i=2#110#11 echo $i expected-stderr-pattern: /^.*:.*2#110#11.*\n$/ --- name: integer-base-err-3 description: Syntax errors in expressions and effects on bases (interactive so errors don't cause exits) (ksh88 fails this test - shell exits, even with -i) arguments: !-i! stdin: PS1= # minimize prompt hassles typeset -i4 a=10 typeset -i a=2+ echo $a typeset -i4 a=10 typeset -i2 a=2+ echo $a expected-stderr-pattern: /^([#\$] )?.*:.*2+.*\n.*:.*2+.*\n$/ expected-stdout: 4#22 4#22 --- name: integer-base-err-4 description: Are invalid digits (according to base) errors? (ksh93 fails this test) expected-exit: e != 0 stdin: typeset -i i; i=3#4 expected-stderr-pattern: /^([#\$] )?.*:.*3#4.*\n$/ --- name: integer-base-1 description: Missing number after base is treated as 0. stdin: typeset -i i i=3 i=2# echo $i expected-stdout: 0 --- name: integer-base-2 description: Check 'stickyness' of base in various situations stdin: typeset -i i=8 echo $i echo ---------- A typeset -i4 j=8 echo $j echo ---------- B typeset -i k=8 typeset -i4 k=8 echo $k echo ---------- C typeset -i4 l l=3#10 echo $l echo ---------- D typeset -i m m=3#10 echo $m echo ---------- E n=2#11 typeset -i n echo $n n=10 echo $n echo ---------- F typeset -i8 o=12 typeset -i4 o echo $o echo ---------- G typeset -i p let p=8#12 echo $p expected-stdout: 8 ---------- A 4#20 ---------- B 4#20 ---------- C 4#3 ---------- D 3#10 ---------- E 2#11 2#1010 ---------- F 4#30 ---------- G 8#12 --- name: integer-base-3 description: More base parsing (hmm doesn't test much..) stdin: typeset -i aa aa=1+12#10+2 echo $aa typeset -i bb bb=1+$aa echo $bb typeset -i bb bb=$aa echo $bb typeset -i cc cc=$aa echo $cc expected-stdout: 15 16 15 15 --- name: integer-base-4 description: Check that things not declared as integers are not made integers, also, check if base is not reset by -i with no arguments. (ksh93 fails - prints 10#20 - go figure) stdin: xx=20 let xx=10 typeset -i | grep '^xx=' typeset -i4 a=10 typeset -i a=20 echo $a expected-stdout: 4#110 --- name: integer-base-5 description: More base stuff stdin: typeset -i4 a=3#10 echo $a echo -- typeset -i j=3 j=~3 echo $j echo -- typeset -i k=1 x[k=k+1]=3 echo $k echo -- typeset -i l for l in 1 2+3 4; do echo $l; done expected-stdout: 4#3 -- -4 -- 2 -- 1 5 4 --- name: integer-base-6 description: Even more base stuff (ksh93 fails this test - prints 0) stdin: typeset -i7 i i= echo $i expected-stdout: 7#0 --- name: integer-base-7 description: Check that non-integer parameters don't get bases assigned stdin: echo $(( zz = 8#100 )) echo $zz expected-stdout: 64 64 --- name: lineno-stdin description: See if $LINENO is updated and can be modified. stdin: echo A $LINENO echo B $LINENO LINENO=20 echo C $LINENO expected-stdout: A 1 B 2 C 20 --- name: lineno-inc description: See if $LINENO is set for .'d files. file-setup: file 644 "dotfile" echo dot A $LINENO echo dot B $LINENO LINENO=20 echo dot C $LINENO stdin: echo A $LINENO echo B $LINENO . ./dotfile expected-stdout: A 1 B 2 dot A 1 dot B 2 dot C 20 --- name: lineno-func description: See if $LINENO is set for commands in a function. stdin: echo A $LINENO echo B $LINENO bar() { echo func A $LINENO echo func B $LINENO } bar echo C $LINENO expected-stdout: A 1 B 2 func A 4 func B 5 C 8 --- name: lineno-unset description: See if unsetting LINENO makes it non-magic. file-setup: file 644 "dotfile" echo dot A $LINENO echo dot B $LINENO stdin: unset LINENO echo A $LINENO echo B $LINENO bar() { echo func A $LINENO echo func B $LINENO } bar . ./dotfile echo C $LINENO expected-stdout: A B func A func B dot A dot B C --- name: lineno-unset-use description: See if unsetting LINENO makes it non-magic even when it is re-used. file-setup: file 644 "dotfile" echo dot A $LINENO echo dot B $LINENO stdin: unset LINENO LINENO=3 echo A $LINENO echo B $LINENO bar() { echo func A $LINENO echo func B $LINENO } bar . ./dotfile echo C $LINENO expected-stdout: A 3 B 3 func A 3 func B 3 dot A 3 dot B 3 C 3 --- name: read-IFS-1 description: Simple test, default IFS stdin: echo "A B " > IN unset x y z read x y z < IN echo 1: "x[$x] y[$y] z[$z]" echo 1a: ${z-z not set} read x < IN echo 2: "x[$x]" expected-stdout: 1: x[A] y[B] z[] 1a: 2: x[A B] --- name: read-ksh-1 description: If no var specified, REPLY is used stdin: echo "abc" > IN read < IN echo "[$REPLY]"; expected-stdout: [abc] --- name: regression-1 description: Lex array code had problems with this. stdin: echo foo[ n=bar echo "hi[ $n ]=1" expected-stdout: foo[ hi[ bar ]=1 --- name: regression-2 description: When PATH is set before running a command, the new path is not used in doing the path search $ echo echo hi > /tmp/q ; chmod a+rx /tmp/q $ PATH=/tmp q q: not found $ in comexec() the two lines while (*vp != NULL) (void) typeset(*vp++, xxx, 0); need to be moved out of the switch to before findcom() is called - I don't know what this will break. stdin: : ${PWD:-`pwd 2> /dev/null`} : ${PWD:?"PWD not set - can't do test"} mkdir Y cat > Y/xxxscript << EOF #!/bin/sh # Need to restore path so echo can be found (some shells don't have # it as a built-in) PATH=\$OLDPATH echo hi exit 0 EOF chmod a+rx Y/xxxscript export OLDPATH="$PATH" PATH=$PWD/Y xxxscript exit $? expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-6 description: Parsing of $(..) expressions is non-optimal. It is impossible to have any parentheses inside the expression. I.e., $ ksh -c 'echo $(echo \( )' no closing quote $ ksh -c 'echo $(echo "(" )' no closing quote $ The solution is to hack the parsing clode in lex.c, the question is how to hack it: should any parentheses be escaped by a backslash, or should recursive parsing be done (so quotes could also be used to hide hem). The former is easier, the later better... stdin: echo $(echo \() expected-stdout: ( --- name: regression-9 description: Continue in a for loop does not work right: for i in a b c ; do if [ $i = b ] ; then continue fi echo $i done Prints a forever... stdin: first=yes for i in a b c ; do if [ $i = b ] ; then if [ $first = no ] ; then echo 'continue in for loop broken' break # hope break isn't broken too :-) fi first=no continue fi done echo bye expected-stdout: bye --- name: regression-10 description: The following: set -- `false` echo $? shoud not print 0. (according to /bin/sh, at&t ksh88, and the getopt(1) man page - not according to POSIX) stdin: set -- `false` echo $? expected-stdout: 1 --- name: regression-11 description: The following: x=/foo/bar/blah echo ${x##*/} should echo blah but on some machines echos /foo/bar/blah. stdin: x=/foo/bar/blah echo ${x##*/} expected-stdout: blah --- name: regression-12 description: Both of the following echos produce the same output under sh/ksh.att: #!/bin/sh x="foo bar" echo "`echo \"$x\"`" echo "`echo "$x"`" pdksh produces different output for the former (foo instead of foo\tbar) stdin: x="foo bar" echo "`echo \"$x\"`" echo "`echo "$x"`" expected-stdout: foo bar foo bar --- name: regression-13 description: The following command hangs forever: $ (: ; cat /etc/termcap) | sleep 2 This is because the shell forks a shell to run the (..) command and this shell has the pipe open. When the sleep dies, the cat doesn't get a SIGPIPE 'cause a process (ie, the second shell) still has the pipe open. NOTE: this test provokes a bizarre bug in ksh93 (shell starts reading commands from /etc/termcap..) time-limit: 10 stdin: echo A line of text that will be duplicated quite a number of times.> t1 cat t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 t1 > t2 cat t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 t2 > t1 cat t1 t1 t1 t1 > t2 (: ; cat t2) | sleep 1 --- name: regression-14 description: The command $ (foobar) 2> /dev/null generates no output under /bin/sh, but pdksh produces the error foobar: not found Also, the command $ foobar 2> /dev/null generates an error under /bin/sh and pdksh, but at&t ksh88 produces no error (redirected to /dev/null). stdin: (you/should/not/see/this/error/1) 2> /dev/null you/should/not/see/this/error/2 2> /dev/null true --- name: regression-15 description: The command $ whence foobar generates a blank line under pdksh and sets the exit status to 0. at&t ksh88 generates no output and sets the exit status to 1. Also, the command $ whence foobar cat generates no output under at&t ksh88 (pdksh generates a blank line and /bin/cat). stdin: whence does/not/exist > /dev/null echo 1: $? echo 2: $(whence does/not/exist | wc -l) echo 3: $(whence does/not/exist cat | wc -l) expected-stdout: 1: 1 2: 0 3: 0 --- name: regression-16 description: ${var%%expr} seems to be broken in many places. On the mips the commands $ read line < /etc/passwd $ echo $line root:0:1:... $ echo ${line%%:*} root $ echo $line root $ change the value of line. On sun4s & pas, the echo ${line%%:*} doesn't work. Haven't checked elsewhere... script: read x y=$x echo ${x%%:*} echo $x stdin: root:asdjhasdasjhs:0:1:Root:/:/bin/sh expected-stdout: root root:asdjhasdasjhs:0:1:Root:/:/bin/sh --- name: regression-17 description: The command . /foo/bar should set the exit status to non-zero (sh and at&t ksh88 do). XXX doting a non existent file is a fatal error for a script stdin: . does/not/exist expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.?/ --- name: regression-19 description: Both of the following echos should produce the same thing, but don't: $ x=foo/bar $ echo ${x%/*} foo $ echo "${x%/*}" foo/bar stdin: x=foo/bar echo "${x%/*}" expected-stdout: foo --- name: regression-21 description: backslash does not work as expected in case labels: $ x='-x' $ case $x in -\?) echo hi esac hi $ x='-?' $ case $x in -\\?) echo hi esac hi $ stdin: case -x in -\?) echo fail esac --- name: regression-22 description: Quoting backquotes inside backquotes doesn't work: $ echo `echo hi \`echo there\` folks` asks for more info. sh and at&t ksh88 both echo hi there folks stdin: echo `echo hi \`echo there\` folks` expected-stdout: hi there folks --- name: regression-23 description: )) is not treated `correctly': $ (echo hi ; (echo there ; echo folks)) missing (( $ instead of (as sh and ksh.att) $ (echo hi ; (echo there ; echo folks)) hi there folks $ stdin: ( : ; ( : ; echo hi)) expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-25 description: Check reading stdin in a while loop. The read should only read a single line, not a whole stdio buffer; the cat should get the rest. stdin: (echo a; echo b) | while read x ; do echo $x cat > /dev/null done expected-stdout: a --- name: regression-26 description: Check reading stdin in a while loop. The read should read both lines, not just the first. script: a= while [ "$a" != xxx ] ; do last=$x read x cat /dev/null | sed 's/x/y/' a=x$a done echo $last stdin: a b expected-stdout: b --- name: regression-27 description: The command . /does/not/exist should cause a script to exit. stdin: . does/not/exist echo hi expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /does\/not\/exist/ --- name: regression-28 description: variable assignements not detected well stdin: a.x=1 echo hi expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /a\.x=1/ --- name: regression-29 description: alias expansion different from at&t ksh88 stdin: alias a='for ' b='i in' a b hi ; do echo $i ; done expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-30 description: strange characters allowed inside ${...} stdin: echo ${a{b}} expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.?/ --- name: regression-31 description: Does read handle partial lines correctly script: a= ret= while [ "$a" != xxx ] ; do read x y z ret=$? a=x$a done echo "[$x]" echo $ret stdin: ! a A aA b B Bb c expected-stdout: [c] 1 --- name: regression-32 description: Does read set variables to null at eof? script: a= while [ "$a" != xxx ] ; do read x y z a=x$a done echo 1: ${x-x not set} ${y-y not set} ${z-z not set} echo 2: ${x:+x not null} ${y:+y not null} ${z:+z not null} stdin: a A Aa b B Bb expected-stdout: 1: 2: --- name: regression-33 description: Does umask print a leading 0 when umask is 3 digits? stdin: umask 222 umask expected-stdout: 0222 --- name: regression-35 description: Tempory files used for here-docs in functions get trashed after the function is parsed (before it is executed) stdin: f1() { cat <<- EOF F1 EOF f2() { cat <<- EOF F2 EOF } } f1 f2 unset -f f1 f2 expected-stdout: F1 F2 F2 --- name: regression-36 description: Command substitution breaks reading in while loop (test from ) stdin: (echo abcdef; echo; echo 123) | while read line do # the following line breaks it c=`echo $line | wc -c` echo $c done expected-stdout: 7 1 4 --- name: regression-37 description: Machines with broken times() (reported by ) time does not report correct real time stdin: time sleep 1 expected-stderr-pattern: !/^\s*0\.0[\s\d]+real|^\s*real[\s]+0+\.0/ --- name: regression-38 description: set -e doesn't ignore exit codes for if/while/until/&&/||/!. arguments: !-e! stdin: if false; then echo hi ; fi false || true false && true while false; do echo hi; done echo ok expected-stdout: ok --- name: regression-39 description: set -e: errors in command substitutions aren't ignored Not clear if they should be or not... bash passes here expected-fail: yes arguments: !-e! stdin: echo `false; echo hi` expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-40 description: This used to cause a core dump env-setup: !RANDOM=12! stdin: echo hi expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-41 description: foo should be set to bar (should not be empty) stdin: foo=` echo bar` echo "($foo)" expected-stdout: (bar) --- name: regression-42 description: Can't use command line assignments to assign readonly parameters. stdin: foo=bar readonly foo foo=stuff env | grep '^foo' expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*read *only.*/ --- name: regression-43 description: Can subshells be prefixed by redirections (historical shells allow this) stdin: < /dev/null (sed 's/^/X/') --- name: regression-44 description: getopts sets OPTIND correctly for unparsed option stdin: set -- -a -a -x while getopts :a optc; do echo "OPTARG=$OPTARG, OPTIND=$OPTIND, optc=$optc." done echo done expected-stdout: OPTARG=, OPTIND=2, optc=a. OPTARG=, OPTIND=3, optc=a. OPTARG=x, OPTIND=3, optc=?. done --- name: regression-45 description: Parameter assignments with [] recognized correctly stdin: FOO=*[12] BAR=abc[ MORE=[abc] JUNK=a[bc echo "<$FOO>" echo "<$BAR>" echo "<$MORE>" echo "<$JUNK>" expected-stdout: <*[12]> <[abc]> --- name: regression-46 description: Check that alias expansion works in command substitutions and at the end of file. stdin: alias x='echo hi' FOO="`x` " echo "[$FOO]" x expected-stdout: [hi ] hi --- name: regression-47 description: Check that aliases are fully read. stdin: alias x='echo hi; echo there' x echo done expected-stdout: hi there done --- name: regression-48 description: Check that (here doc) temp files are not left behind after an exec. stdin: mkdir foo || exit 1 TMPDIR=$PWD/foo $0 <<- 'EOF' x() { sed 's/^/X /' << E_O_F hi there folks E_O_F echo "done ($?)" } echo=echo; [ -x /bin/echo ] && echo=/bin/echo exec $echo subtest-1 hi EOF echo subtest-1 foo/* TMPDIR=$PWD/foo $0 <<- 'EOF' echo=echo; [ -x /bin/echo ] && echo=/bin/echo sed 's/^/X /' << E_O_F; exec $echo subtest-2 hi a few lines E_O_F EOF echo subtest-2 foo/* expected-stdout: subtest-1 hi subtest-1 foo/* X a X few X lines subtest-2 hi subtest-2 foo/* --- name: regression-49 description: Check that unset params with attributes are reported by set, those sans attributes are not. stdin: unset FOO BAR echo X$FOO export BAR typeset -i BLAH set | grep FOO set | grep BAR set | grep BLAH expected-stdout: X BAR BLAH --- name: regression-50 description: Check that aliases do not use continuation prompt after trailing semi-colon. file-setup: file 644 "env" PS1=Y PS2=X env-setup: !ENV=./env! arguments: !-i! stdin: alias foo='echo hi ; ' foo foo echo there expected-stdout: hi hi there expected-stderr: ! YYYY --- name: regression-51 description: Check that set allows both +o and -o options on same command line. stdin: set a b c set -o noglob +o allexport echo A: $*, * expected-stdout: A: a b c, * --- name: regression-52 description: Check that globing works in pipelined commands file-setup: file 644 "env" PS1=P file-setup: file 644 "abc" stuff env-setup: !ENV=./env! arguments: !-i! stdin: sed 's/^/X /' < ab* echo mark 1 sed 's/^/X /' < ab* | sed 's/^/Y /' echo mark 2 expected-stdout: X stuff mark 1 Y X stuff mark 2 expected-stderr: ! PPPPP --- name: regression-53 description: Check that getopts works in functions stdin: #!/bin/ksh bfunc() { echo bfunc: enter "(args: $*; OPTIND=$OPTIND)" while getopts B oc; do case $oc in (B) echo bfunc: B option ;; (*) echo bfunc: odd option "($oc)" ;; esac done echo bfunc: leave } function kfunc { echo kfunc: enter "(args: $*; OPTIND=$OPTIND)" while getopts K oc; do case $oc in (K) echo kfunc: K option ;; (*) echo bfunc: odd option "($oc)" ;; esac done echo kfunc: leave } set -- -f -b -k -l echo "line 1: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 2: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" bfunc -BBB blah echo "line 3: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 4: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" kfunc -KKK blah echo "line 5: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 6: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" echo OPTIND=1 set -- -fbkl echo "line 10: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 20: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" bfunc -BBB blah echo "line 30: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 40: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" kfunc -KKK blah echo "line 50: OPTIND=$OPTIND" getopts kbfl optc echo "line 60: ret=$?, optc=$optc, OPTIND=$OPTIND" expected-stdout: line 1: OPTIND=1 line 2: ret=0, optc=f, OPTIND=2 bfunc: enter (args: -BBB blah; OPTIND=2) bfunc: B option bfunc: B option bfunc: leave line 3: OPTIND=2 line 4: ret=0, optc=b, OPTIND=3 kfunc: enter (args: -KKK blah; OPTIND=1) kfunc: K option kfunc: K option kfunc: K option kfunc: leave line 5: OPTIND=3 line 6: ret=0, optc=k, OPTIND=4 line 10: OPTIND=1 line 20: ret=0, optc=f, OPTIND=2 bfunc: enter (args: -BBB blah; OPTIND=2) bfunc: B option bfunc: B option bfunc: leave line 30: OPTIND=2 line 40: ret=1, optc=?, OPTIND=2 kfunc: enter (args: -KKK blah; OPTIND=1) kfunc: K option kfunc: K option kfunc: K option kfunc: leave line 50: OPTIND=2 line 60: ret=1, optc=?, OPTIND=2 --- name: regression-54 description: Check that ; is not required before the then in if (( ... )) then ... stdin: if (( 1 )) then echo ok dparen fi if [[ -n 1 ]] then echo ok dbrackets fi expected-stdout: ok dparen ok dbrackets --- name: regression-55 description: Check ${foo:%bar} is allowed (ksh88 allows it...) stdin: x=fooXbarXblah echo 1 ${x%X*} echo 2 ${x:%X*} echo 3 ${x%%X*} echo 4 ${x:%%X*} echo 5 ${x#*X} echo 6 ${x:#*X} echo 7 ${x##*X} echo 8 ${x:##*X} expected-stdout: 1 fooXbar 2 fooXbar 3 foo 4 foo 5 barXblah 6 barXblah 7 blah 8 blah --- name: regression-56 description: Check eval vs substitution exit codes (this is what ksh88 does) stdin: eval $(false) echo A $? eval ' $(false)' echo B $? eval " $(false)" echo C $? eval "eval $(false)" echo D $? eval 'eval '"$(false)" echo E $? IFS="$IFS:" eval $(echo :; false) echo F $? expected-stdout: A 1 B 1 C 1 D 0 E 0 F 1 --- name: regression-57 description: Check if typeset output is correct for uninitialized array elements. stdin: typeset -i xxx[4] echo A typeset -i | grep xxx | sed 's/^/ /' echo B typeset | grep xxx | sed 's/^/ /' xxx[1]=2+5 echo M typeset -i | grep xxx | sed 's/^/ /' echo N typeset | grep xxx | sed 's/^/ /' expected-stdout: A xxx B typeset -i xxx M xxx[1]=7 N typeset -i xxx --- name: regression-58 description: Check if trap exit is ok (exit not mistaken for signal name) stdin: trap 'echo hi' exit trap exit 1 expected-stdout: hi --- name: regression-59 description: Check if ${#array[*]} is calculated correctly. stdin: a[12]=hi a[8]=there echo ${#a[*]} expected-stdout: 2 --- name: regression-60 description: Check if default exit status is previous command stdin: (true; exit) echo A $? (false; exit) echo B $? ( (exit 103) ; exit) echo C $? expected-stdout: A 0 B 1 C 103 --- name: regression-61 description: Check if EXIT trap is executed for sub shells. stdin: trap 'echo parent exit' EXIT echo start (echo A; echo A last) echo B (echo C; trap 'echo sub exit' EXIT; echo C last) echo parent last expected-stdout: start A A last B C C last sub exit parent last parent exit --- name: regression-62 description: Check if test -nt/-ot succeeds if second(first) file is missing. stdin: touch a test a -nt b && echo nt OK || echo nt BAD test b -ot a && echo ot OK || echo ot BAD expected-stdout: nt OK ot OK --- name: syntax-1 description: Check that lone ampersand is a syntax error stdin: & expected-exit: e != 0 expected-stderr-pattern: /syntax error/ --- name: xxx-quoted-newline-1 description: Check that \ works inside of ${} stdin: abc=2 echo ${ab\ c} expected-stdout: 2 --- name: xxx-quoted-newline-2 description: Check that \ works at the start of a here document stdin: cat << EO\ F hi EOF expected-stdout: hi --- name: xxx-quoted-newline-3 description: Check that \ works at the end of a here document stdin: cat << EOF hi EO\ F expected-stdout: hi --- name: xxx-multi-assignment-cmd description: Check that assignments in a command affect subsequent assignments in the same command stdin: FOO=abc FOO=123 BAR=$FOO echo $BAR expected-stdout: 123 --- name: xxx-exec-environment-1 description: Check to see if exec sets it's environment correctly stdin: FOO=bar exec env expected-stdout-pattern: /(^|.*\n)FOO=bar\n/ --- name: xxx-exec-environment-2 description: Check to make sure exec doesn't change environment if a program isn't exec-ed stdin: env > bar1 FOO=bar exec; env > bar2 cmp -s bar1 bar2 --- name: xxx-what-do-you-call-this-1 stdin: echo "${foo:-"a"}*" expected-stdout: a* --- name: xxx-prefix-strip-1 stdin: foo='a cdef' echo ${foo#a c} expected-stdout: def --- name: xxx-prefix-strip-2 stdin: set a c x='a cdef' echo ${x#$*} expected-stdout: def --- name: xxx-variable-syntax-1 stdin: echo ${:} expected-stderr-pattern: /bad substitution/ expected-exit: 1 --- name: xxx-subsitution-eval-order description: Check order of evaluation of expressions stdin: i=1 x= y= set -A A abc def GHI j G k echo ${A[x=(i+=1)]#${A[y=(i+=2)]}} echo $x $y expected-stdout: HI 2 4 --- name: xxx-set-option-1 description: Check option parsing in set stdin: set -vsA foo -- A 1 3 2 echo ${foo[*]} expected-stderr: echo ${foo[*]} expected-stdout: 1 2 3 A --- name: xxx-exec-1 description: Check that exec exits for built-ins arguments: !-i! stdin: exec print hi echo still herre expected-stdout: hi expected-stderr-pattern: /.*/ --- name: xxx-while-1 description: Check the return value of while loops XXX need to do same for for/select/until loops stdin: i=x while [ $i != xxx ] ; do i=x$i if [ $i = xxx ] ; then false continue fi done echo loop1=$? i=x while [ $i != xxx ] ; do i=x$i if [ $i = xxx ] ; then false break fi done echo loop2=$? i=x while [ $i != xxx ] ; do i=x$i false done echo loop3=$? expected-stdout: loop1=0 loop2=0 loop3=1 --- name: xxx-status-1 description: Check that blank lines don't clear $? arguments: !-i! stdin: (exit 1) echo $? (exit 1) echo $? true expected-stdout: 1 1 expected-stderr-pattern: /.*/ --- name: xxx-status-2 description: Check that $? is preserved in subshells, includes, traps. stdin: (exit 1) echo blank: $? (exit 2) (echo subshell: $?) echo 'echo include: $?' > foo (exit 3) . ./foo trap 'echo trap: $?' ERR (exit 4) echo exit: $? expected-stdout: blank: 1 subshell: 2 include: 3 trap: 4 exit: 4 --- name: xxx-clean-chars-1 description: Check MAGIC character is stuffed correctly stdin: echo `echo [£` expected-stdout: [£ --- name: xxx-param-subst-qmark-1 description: Check suppresion of error message with null string. According to POSIX, it shouldn't print the error as 'word' isn't ommitted. ksh88, Solaris /bin/sh and /usr/xpg4/bin/sh all print the error, that's why the condition is reversed. stdin: unset foo x= echo x${foo?$x} expected-exit: 1 # POSIX #expected-fail: yes #expected-stderr-pattern: !/not set/ # common use expected-stderr-pattern: /parameter null or not set/ --- name: xxx-param-_-1 description: Check c flag is set. arguments: !-c!echo "[$-]"! expected-stdout-pattern: /^\[.*c.*\]$/ --- name: tilde-expand-1 description: Check tilde expansion after equal signs env-setup: !HOME=/sweet! stdin: echo ${A=a=}~ b=~ c=d~ ~ set +o braceexpand echo ${A=a=}~ b=~ c=d~ ~ expected-stdout: a=/sweet b=/sweet c=d~ /sweet a=~ b=~ c=d~ /sweet --- name: errexit-1 description: Check some "exit on error" conditions stdin: set -ex /usr/bin/env false && echo something echo END expected-stdout: END expected-stderr: + /usr/bin/env false + echo END --- name: errexit-2 description: Check some "exit on error" edge conditions stdin: set -ex if /usr/bin/env true; then /usr/bin/env false && echo something fi echo END expected-stdout: END expected-stderr: + /usr/bin/env true + /usr/bin/env false + echo END --- name: version-1 description: Check version of shell. category: pdksh stdin: echo $KSH_VERSION expected-stdout: @(#)MIRBSD KSH R24 2005/07/04 ---