alias expansion inside the switch as appropriate. This is achieved by a
flag noalias which is turned on and off in as we parse. In the following
example [1] and [0] indicate the value of noalias.
[0] case <expr> in
[1] <lit> ) [0] <expr> ;;
[1] <lit> ) [0] <expr> ;;
...
[1] esac [0]
FreeBSD does:
[0] case <expr> in [1]
<lit> ) <expr> ;;
<lit> ) <expr> ;;
...
esac [0]
This handles the following shell script:
alias a=ls
case $1 in
a) echo a;
a;;
f) echo f;;
*) echo default;;
esac
Make sure that each va_start has one and only one matching va_end,
especially in error cases.
If the va_list is used multiple times, do multiple va_starts/va_ends.
If a function gets va_list as argument, don't let it use va_end (since
it's the callers responsibility).
Improved by comments from enami and christos -- thanks!
Heimdal/krb4/KAME changes already fed back, rest to follow.
Inspired by, but not not based on, OpenBSD.
(i.e. processes started from shell scripts). Fixes problem where kill -STOP'ing
a subprocess of a shell script would cause the shell to proceed to the next
command.
have separate man pages for them.
Xref passwd 5 instead of 4, environ 7 instead of 5, and comment out xref
to profile(4), which we don't have.
Improve markup of SYNOPSIS.
Some whitespace fixes while I'm here.
POSIX recommendations.
- trap now accepts signal names and signal numbers
e.g. INT, SIGINT, 2
- added option -l that outputs a list of valid signals
- added signal EXIT to list of valid signals
- a `-' in the action part will reset specified signal to their
default behaviour
- changed standard output format to make it suitable as an input
to another shell that achieves the same trapping results
__CONCAT("PATH=",_PATH_STDPATH);
actually works to concantate strings, it's because the preprocessor expands
it into "PATH=""whatever _PATH_STDPATH is" as separate strings, and then
ANSI string concatenation is performed on that. It's more straightforward
to just use ANSI string concatenation directly, and newer GCCs complain
(rightly) about mis-use of token pasting.
Fix from FreeBSD:
growstackblock() sometimes relocates a stack_block considered empty
without properly relocating stack marks referencing that block.
The first call to popstackmark() with the unrelocated stack mark
as argument then causes sh to abort.
Relocating the relevant stack marks seems to solve this problem.
The patch changes the semantics of popstackmark() somewhat. It can
only be called once after a call to setstackmark(), thus cmdloop() in
main.c needs an extra call to setstackmark().
and so it shouldn't use __P. (this should probably be done better, by
not declaring the parser functions in headers used by host programs,
but this works well enough.)