the LINENO hack, and uses the LINENO var for both ${LINENO} and $((LINENO)).
(Code to invert the LINENO hack when required, like when de-compiling the
execution tree to provide the "jobs" command strings, is still included,
that can be deleted when the LINENO hack is completely removed - look for
refs to VSLINENO throughout the code. The var funclinno in parser.c can
also be removed, it is used only for the LINENO hack.)
This version produces accurate results: $((LINENO)) was made as accurate
as the LINENO hack made ${LINENO} which is very good. That's why the
LINENO hack is not yet completely removed, so it can be easily re-enabled.
If you can tell the difference when it is in use, or not in use, then
something has broken (or I managed to miss a case somewhere.)
The way that LINENO works is documented in its own (new) section in the
man page, so nothing more about that, or the new options, etc, here.
This version introduces the possibility of having a "reference" function
associated with a variable, which gets called whenever the value of the
variable is required (that's what implements LINENO). There is just
one function pointer however, so any particular variable gets at most
one of the set function (as used for PATH, etc) or the reference function.
The VFUNCREF bit in the var flags indicates which func the variable in
question uses (if any - the func ptr, as before, can be NULL).
I would not call the results of this perfect yet, but it is close.
closing PR bin/50958
That meant adding the assignment operators ('=', and all of the +=, *= ...)
Currently, ++, --, and ',' are not implemented (none of those are required
by posix) but support for them (most likely ',' first) might be added later.
To do this, I removed the yacc/lex arithmetic parser completely, and
replaced it with a hand written recursive descent parser, that I obtained
from FreeBSD, who earlier had obtained it from dash (Herbert Xu).
While doing the import, I cleaned up the sources (changed some file names
to avoid requiring a clean build, or signifigant surgery to the obj
directories if "build.sh -u" was to be used - "build.sh -u" should work
fine as it is now) removed some dashisms, applied some KNF, ...