301 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
301 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
$MirBSD: src/bin/ksh/NOTES,v 2.3 2004/12/13 18:53:25 tg Exp $
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$OpenBSD: NOTES,v 1.9 2003/10/26 15:07:25 jmc Exp $
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General features of at&t ksh88 that are not (yet) in pdksh:
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- exported aliases and functions (not in ksh93).
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- set -t.
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- signals/traps not cleared during functions.
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- trap DEBUG, local ERR and EXIT traps in functions.
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- ERRNO parameter.
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- doesn't have posix file globbing (eg, [[:alpha:]], etc.).
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- use of an 'agent' to execute unreadable/setuid/setgid shell scripts
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(don't ask).
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- read/select aren't hooked in to the command line editor
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- the last command of a pipeline is not run in the parent shell
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- MAIL, MAILPATH, MAILCHECK have been removed in mirbsdksh.
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Known bugs (see also BUG-REPORTS and PROJECTS files):
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Variable parsing, Expansion:
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- some specials behave differently when unset (eg, IFS behaves like
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" \t\n") others lose their special meaning. IFS/PATH taken care of,
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still need to sort out some others (eg, TMOUT).
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Parsing,Lexing:
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- line numbers in errors are wrong for nested constructs. Need to
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keep track of the line a command started on (can use for LINENO
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parameter as well).
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- a $(..) expression nested inside double quotes inside another $(..)
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isn't parsed correctly (eg, $(echo "foo$(echo ")")") )
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Commands,Execution:
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- setting special parameters that have side effects when
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changed/restored (ie, HISTFILE, OPTIND, RANDOM) in front
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of a command (eg, HISTFILE=/foo/bar echo hi) effects the parent
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shell. Note that setting other (not so special) parameters
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does not effect the parent shell.
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- 'echo hi | exec cat -n' causes at&t to exit, 'exec echo hi | cat -n'
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does not. pdksh exits for neither. Don't think POSIX requires
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an exit, but not sure.
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- 'echo foo | read bar; echo $bar' prints foo in at&t ksh, nothing
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in pdksh (ie, the read is done in a separate process in pdksh).
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Misc:
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Known problems not caused by ksh:
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- after stoping a job, emacs/vi is not re-entered. Hitting return
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prints the prompt and everything is fine again. Problem (often
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involving a pager like less) is related to order of process
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scheduling (shell runs before 'stop'ed (sub) processes have had a chance
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to clean up the screen/terminal).
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Known differences between pdksh & at&t ksh (that may change)
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- vi:
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- '^U': at&t: kills only what has been inserted, pdksh: kills to
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start of line
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- at&t ksh login shells say "Warning: you have running jobs" if you
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try to exit when there are running jobs. An immediate second attempt
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to exit will kill the jobs and exit. pdksh does not print a warning,
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nor does it kill running jobs when it exits (it does warn/kill for
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stopped jobs).
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- TMOUT: at&t prints warning, then waits another 60 seconds. If on screwed
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up serial line, the output could cause more input, so pdksh just
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prints a message and exits. (Also, in at&t ksh, setting TMOUT has no
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effect after the sequence "TMOUT=60; unset TMOUT", which could be
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useful - pdksh may do this in the future).
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- in pdksh, if the last command of a pipeline is a shell builtin, it is
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not executed in the parent shell, so "echo a b | read foo bar" does not
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set foo and bar in the parent shell (at&t ksh will).
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This may get fixed in the future, but it may take a while.
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- in pdksh, set +o lists the options that are currently set, in at&t ksh
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it is the same as set -o.
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- in pdksh emacs mode, ^T does what gnu emacs does, not what at&t ksh
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does.
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- in ksh93, '. name' calls a function (defined with function) with POSIX
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semantics (instead of ksh semantics). in pdksh, . does not call
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functions.
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- test: "test -f foo bar blah" is the same as "test -f foo" (the extra
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arguments, of which there must be at least 2, are ignored) - pdksh
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generates an error message (unexpected operator/operand "bar") as it
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should. Sometimes used to test file globs (e.g., if test -f *.o; ...).
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- if the command 'sleep 5 && /bin/echo blah' is run interactively and
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is the sleep is stopped (^Z), the echo is run immediately in pdksh.
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In at&t ksh, the whole thing is stopped.
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- LINENO:
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- in ksh88 variable is always 1 (can't be changed) in interac mode;
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in pdksh it changes.
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- Value of LINENO after it has been set by the script in one file
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is bizarre when used in another file.
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Known differences between pdksh & at&t ksh (that are not likely to change)
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- at&t ksh seems to catch or ignore SIGALRM - pdksh dies upon receipt
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(unless it's traped of course)
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- typeset:
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- at&t ksh overloads -u/-l options: for integers, means unsigned/long,
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for strings means uppercase/lowercase; pdksh just has the
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upper/lower case (which can be useful for integers when base > 10).
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unsigned/long really should have their own options.
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- at&t ksh can't have justified integer variables
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(eg, typeset -iR5 j=10), pdksh can.
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- in pdksh, number arguments for -L/-R/-Z/-i must follow the option
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character, at&t allows it at the end of the option group (eg,
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at&t ksh likes "typeset -iu5 j", pdksh wants "typeset -i5 -u j"
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or "typeset -ui5 j"). Also, pdksh allows "typeset -i 5 j" (same
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as "typeset -i5 j"), at&t ksh does not allow this.
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- typeset -R: pdksh strips trailing space type characters (ie,
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uses isspace()), at&t ksh only skips blanks.
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- at&t ksh allows attributes of read-only variables to be changed,
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pdksh allows only the export attribute to be set.
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- (some) at&t ksh allows set -A of readonly variables, pdksh does not.
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- at&t ksh allows command assignments of readonly variables (eg, YY=2 cat),
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pdksh does not.
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- at&t ksh does not exit scripts when an implicit assignment to an integer
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variable fails due to an expression error: eg,
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echo 2+ > /tmp/x
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unset x; typeset -i x
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read x < /tmp/x
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echo still here
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prints an error and then prints "still here", similarly for
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unset x; typeset -i x
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set +A x 1 2+ 3
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echo still here
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and
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unset x y; typeset -i x y; set +A y 10 20 30
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set +A x 1 1+y[2+] 3
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echo still here
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pdksh exits a script in all the above cases. (note that both shells
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exit for:
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unset x; typeset -i x
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for x in 1 2+ 3; do echo x=$x; done
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echo still here
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).
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- at&t ksh seems to allow function calls inside expressions
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(eg, typeset -i x='y(2)') but they do not seem to be regular functions
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nor math functions (eg, pow, exp) - anyone known anything about this?
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- 'set -o nounset; unset foo; echo ${#foo}': at&t ksh prints 0; pdksh
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generates error. Same for ${#foo[*]} and ${#foo[@]}.
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- . file: at&t ksh parses the whole file before executing anything,
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pdksh executes as it parses. This means aliases defined in the file
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will affect how pdksh parses the file, but won't affect how at&t ksh
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parses the file. Also means pdksh will not parse statements occurring
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after a (executed) return statement.
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- a return in $ENV in at&t ksh will cause the shell to exit, while in
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pdksh it will stop executing the script (this is consistent with
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what a return in .profile does in both shells).
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- at&t ksh does file globbing for 'echo "${foo:-"*"}"', pdksh does not
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(POSIX would seem to indicate pdksh is right).
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- at&t ksh thinks ${a:##foo} is ok, pdksh doesn't.
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- at&t does tilde expansion on here-document delimiters, pdksh does
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not. eg.
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$ cat << ~michael
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~michael
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$
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works for pdksh, not for at&t ksh (POSIX seems to agree with pdksh).
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- in at&t ksh, tracked aliases have the export flag implicitly set
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and tracked aliases and normal aliases live in the same name space
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(eg, "alias" will list both tracked and normal aliases).
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in pdksh, -t does not imply -x (since -x doesn't do anything yet), and
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tracked/normal aliases live in separate name spaces.
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in at&t ksh, alias accepts + options (eg, +x, +t) - pdksh does not.
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in pdksh, alias has a -d option to allow examination/changing of
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cached ~ entries, also unalias has -d and -t options (unalias -d
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is useful if the ~ cache gets out of date - not sure how at&t deals
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with this problem (it does cache ~ entries)).
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- at&t ksh will stop a recursive function after about 60 calls; pdksh
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will not since the limit is arbitrary and can't be controlled
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by the user (hit ^C if you get in trouble).
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- the wait command (with and without arguments) in at&t ksh will wait for
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stopped jobs when job control is enabled. pdksh doesn't.
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- at&t ksh automatically sets the bgnice option for interactive shells;
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pdksh does not.
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- in at&t ksh, "eval $(false); echo $?" prints 1, pdksh prints 0 (which
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is what POSIX says it should). Same goes for "wait $(false); echo $?".
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(same goes for "set $(false); echo $?" if posix option is set - some
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scripts that use the old getopt depend on this, so be careful about
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setting the posix option).
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- in at&t ksh, print -uX and read -uX are interrperted as -u with no
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argument (defaults to 1 and 0 respectively) and -X (which may or
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may not be a valid flag). In pdksh, -uX is interpreted as file
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descriptor X.
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- in at&t ksh, some signals (HUP, INT, QUIT) cause the read to exit, others
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(ie, everything else) do not. When it does cause exiting, anything read
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to that point is used (usually an empty line) and read returns with 0
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status. pdksh currently does similar things, but for TERM as well and
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the exit status is 128+<signal-number> - in future, pdksh's read will
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do this for all signals that are normally fatal as required by POSIX.
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(POSIX does not require the setting of variables to null so applications
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shouldn't rely on this).
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- in pdksh, ! substitution done before variable substitution; in at&t ksh
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it is done after substitution (and therefor may do ! substitutions on
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the result of variable substitutions). POSIX doesn't say which is to be
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done.
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- pwd: in at&t ksh, it ignores arguments; in pdksh, it complains when given
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arguments.
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- the at&t ksh does not do command substition on PS1, pdksh does.
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- ksh93 allows ". foo" to run the function foo if there is no file
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called foo (go figure).
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- field splitting (IFS): ksh88/ksh93 strip leading non-white space IFS
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chars, pdksh (and POSIX, I think) leave them intact. e.g.
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$ IFS="$IFS:"; read x; echo "<$x>"
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::
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prints "<>" in at&t ksh, "<::>" in pdksh.
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- command completion: at&t ksh will do completion on a blank line (matching
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all commands), pdksh does not (as this isn't very useful - use * if
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you really want the list).
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- co-processes: if ksh93, the write portion of the co-process output is
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closed when the most recently started co-process exits. pdksh closes
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it when all the co-processes using it have exited.
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- pdksh accepts empty command lists for while and for statements, while
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at&t ksh (and sh) don't. Eg., pdksh likes
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while false ; do done
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but ksh88 doesn't like it.
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- pdksh bumps RANDOM in parent after a fork, at&t ksh bumps it in both
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parent and child:
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RANDOM=1
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echo child: $(echo $RANDOM)
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echo parent: $RANDOM
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will produce "child: 16838 parent: 5758" in pdksh, while at&t ksh
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will produce "child: 5758 parent: 5758".
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Oddities in ksh (pd & at&t):
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- array references inside (())/$(()) are strange:
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$(( x[2] )) does the expected, $(( $x[2] )) doesn't.
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- 'typeset -R3 X='x '; echo "($X)"' produces ( x) - trailing
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spaces are stripped.
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- typeset -R turns off Z flag.
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- both shells have the following mis-feature:
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$ x='function xx {
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cat -n <<- EOF
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here we are in xx
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EOF
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}'
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$ (eval "$x"; (sleep 2; xx) & echo bye)
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[1] 1234
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bye
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$ xx: /tmp/sh1234.1: cannot open
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- bizarre special handling of alias/export/readonly/typeset arguments
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$ touch a=a; typeset a=[ab]; echo "$a"
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a=[ab]
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$ x=typeset; $x a=[ab]; echo "$a"
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a=a
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$
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- both ignore SIGTSTP,SIGTTIN,SIGTTOU in exec'd processes when talking
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and not monitoring (at&t ksh kind of does this). Doesn't really make
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sense.
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(Note that ksh.att -ic 'set +m; check-sigs' shows TSTP et al aren't
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ignored, while ksh.att -ic 'set +m^J check-sigs' does... very strange)
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- when tracing (set -x), and a command's stderr is redirected, the trace
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output is also redirected. so "set -x; echo foo 2> /tmp/O > /dev/null"
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will create /tmp/foo with the lines "+ > /dev/null" and "+ echo foo".
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- undocumented at&t ksh feature: FPATH is searched after PATH if no
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executable is found, even if typeset -uf wasn't used.
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[...]
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POSIX sh questions (references are to POSIX 1003.2-1992)
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- arithmetic expressions: how are empty expressions treated?
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(eg, echo $(( ))). at&t ksh (and now pdksh) echo 0.
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Same question goes for 'test "" -eq 0' - does this generate an error
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or, if not, what is the exit code?
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- should tilde expansion occur after :'s in the word part of ${..=..}?
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(me thinks it should)
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- if a signal is received during the execution of a built-in,
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does the builtin command exit or the whole shell?
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- is it legal to execute last command of pipeline in current
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execution environment (eg, can "echo foo | read bar" set
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bar?)
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- what action should be taken if there is an error doing a dup due
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to system limits (eg, not enough feil destriptors): is this
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a "redirection error" (in which case a script will exit iff the
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error occured while executing a special built-in)?
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IMHO, shell should exit script. Couldn't find a blanket statement
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like "if shell encounters an unexpected system error, it shall
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exit non-interactive scripts"...
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POSIX sh bugs (references are to POSIX 1003.2-1992)
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- in vi insert mode, ^W deletes to beginning of line or to the first
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blank/punct character (para at line 9124, section 3). This means
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"foo ^W" will do nothing. This is inconsistent with the vi
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spec, which says delete preceding word including and interceding
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blanks (para at line 5189, section 5).
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- parameter expansion, section 3.6.2, line 391: 'in each case that a
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value of word is needed (..), word shall be subjected to tilde
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expansion, parameter expansion, ...'. Various expansions should not
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be performed if parameter is in double quotes.
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- the getopts description says assigning OPTIND a value other than 1
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produces undefined results, while the rationale for getopts suggests
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saving/restoring the OPTIND value inside functions (since POSIX
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functions don't do the save/restore automatically). Restoring
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OPTIND is kind of dumb since getopts may have been in the middle
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of parsing a group of flags (eg, -abc).
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- unclear whether arithmetic expressions (eg, $((..))) should
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understand C integer constants (ie, 0x123, 0177). at&t ksh doesn't
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and neither does pdksh.
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- `...` definition (3.6.3) says nothing about backslash followed by
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a newline, which sh and at&t ksh strip out completely. e.g.,
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$ show-args `echo 'X
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Y'`
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Number of args: 1
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1: <XY>
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$
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POSIX would indicate the backslash-newline would be preserved.
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- does not say how "cat << ''" is to be treated (illegal, read 'til
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blank line, or read 'til eof). at&t ksh reads til eof, bourne shell
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reads 'til blank line. pdksh reads 'til blank line.
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