mksh/tests/regress.t

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# $OpenBSD: regress.t,v 1.12 2003/11/08 19:17:27 jmc Exp $
#
# The first 39 of these tests are from the old Bugs script.
#
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
---
#
# 3. Sun OS 4.0.x (This seems to be a problem with sun's PENDIN not being done
# properly)
# sleep 5^J ls^J ls^J ls [only first ls runs]
# vi ... ZZ (while waiting type) [some of the input gets eaten]
# [not present in SunOS 4.1.x]
#echo " [No automatic test for bug 3 - interactive]"
#
# 4. (fixed)
#
#echo " [Don't know what bug 4 was]"
#
# 5. Everywhere
# File name completion (^X,*) does not mesh well with cd and
# symbolic links. cd does path simplification wrt $PWD before
# doing the actual chdir(), while file name completion does
# not do the simplification. E.g., you are in directory A
# which has a symbolic link to directory B, you create a file
# called foobar and you then cd to the symlink to B, and type
# $ echo ../foo^X
# and the shell beeps at you. Would be more consistent to
# do the completion after simplifing the `$PWD/..'.
#echo " [No automatic test for bug 5 - interactive]"
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:
(
---
#
# 7. (fixed)
#
#echo " [Don't know what bug 7 was]"
#
# 8. Everywhere - NOT A BUG - this is what at&t ksh88 does
# Strange typset -x behaviour in functions. The following function
# does not set the environment variable BLAH outside the function:
# function blah
# {
# typeset -x BLAH=foobar
# }
# This function does work:
# function blah
# { BLAH=foobar; export BLAH
# }
#echo ' [Bug 8 was bogus]'
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: /.?/
---
#
# 18. Everywhere
# In vi mode ^X (and *) can dump core:
# $ ab[cd^XMemory fault (core dumped)
#echo " [No automatic test for bug 18 - interactive]"
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
---
#
# 20. (same as 18)
#
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
---
#
# 24. strangeness with file name completion involving symlinks to nowhere
# $ mkdir foo foo/bar
# $ ln -s /stuff/junk foo/bar/xx
# $ echo foo/*/xx 
# (beep)
# $
#echo " [No automatic test for bug 24 - interactive]"
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
---
#
#
# Does umask print a umask of 0 sanely?
# There is lots of variety here (0, 00, 000, and 0000 have all been
# seen in various shells...)
#
#echo ' [Bug 34 was bogus]'
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 <sjg@void.zen.oz.au>)
stdin:
(echo abcdef; echo; echo 123) |
while read line
do
# the following line breaks it
c=`echo $line | wc -c`
echo $c
done
expected-stdout:
7
1
4
---
name: regression-37
description:
Machines with broken times() (reported by <sjg@void.zen.oz.au>)
time does not report correct real time
stdin:
time sleep 1
expected-stderr-pattern: !/^\s*0\.0[\s\d]+real|^\s*real[\s]+0+\.0/
---
name: regression-38
description:
set -e doesn't ignore exit codes for if/while/until/&&/||/!.
arguments: !-e!
stdin:
if false; then echo hi ; fi
false || true
false && true
while false; do echo hi; done
echo ok
expected-stdout:
ok
---
name: regression-39
description:
set -e: errors in command substitutions aren't ignored
Not clear if they should be or not...
expected-fail: yes
arguments: !-e!
stdin:
echo `false; echo hi`
expected-stdout:
hi
---
name: regression-40
description:
This used to cause a core dump
env-setup: !RANDOM=12!
stdin:
echo hi
expected-stdout:
hi
---
name: regression-41
description:
foo should be set to bar (should not be empty)
stdin:
foo=`
echo bar`
echo "($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 "<$JUNK>"
expected-stdout:
<*[12]>
<abc[>
<[abc]>
<a[bc>
---
name: regression-46
description:
Check that alias expansion works in command substitutions and
at the end of file.
stdin:
alias x='echo hi'
FOO="`x` "
echo "[$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
---