mksh/tests/read.t
tg 6c8eabf72e polish, mop up whitespace, etc.
passes regressions on MirOS
2004-05-24 19:56:25 +00:00

58 lines
1.4 KiB
Perl

# $MirBSD: read.t,v 1.2 2004/05/24 19:56:25 tg Stab $
# $OpenBSD: read.t,v 1.3 2003/03/10 03:48:16 david Exp $
#
# To test:
# POSIX:
# - if no -r, \ is escape character
# - \newline disappear
# - \<IFS> -> don't break here
# - \<anything-else> -> <anything-else>
# - if -r, backslash is not special
# - if stdin is tty and shell interactive
# - prompt for continuation if \newline (prompt to stderr)
# - a here-document isn't terminated after newline ????
# - remaining vars set to empty string (not null)
# - check field splitting
# - left over fields and their separators assigned to last var
# - exit status is normally 0
# - exit status is > 0 on eof
# - exit status > 0 on error
# - signals interrupt reads
# extra:
# - can't change read-only variables
# - error if var name bogus
# - set -o allexport effects read
# ksh:
# x check default variable: REPLY
# - check -p, -s, -u options
# - check var?prompt stuff
# - "echo a b | read x y" sets x,y in parent shell (at&t)
#
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]
---