- ansification
- format of output of jobs command (etc)
- job identiers %+, %- etc
- $? and $(...)
- correct quoting of output of set, export -p and readonly -p
- differentiation between nornal and 'posix special' builtins
- correct behaviour (posix) for errors on builtins and special builtins
- builtin printf and kill
- set -o debug (if compiled with DEBUG)
- cd src obj (as ksh - too useful to do without)
- unset -e name, remove non-readonly variable from export list.
(so I could unset -e PS1 before running the test shell...)
the syntax maps to determine the beginning and end quotes (kill
CENDQUOTE). Handle single quotes opening and closing via checking
the current syntax map. Keep a bitmap of doublequote state one bit
per variable nesting level. For the first 32 nested double quotes,
we don't need any additional memory, but for more we allocate
dynamically.
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
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.)
such as sh -c 'echo `echo foo`' .
The memory allocated with ckmalloc() at
parser.c:1349:readtoken1() (search for "done:" label)
was never freed.
I changed this to use 'string stack' framework of Ash.
Note that a string on string stack is properly freed on
exception and end of command parsing, and no explicit free
or signal handlings required.
See TOUR for an overview, and memalloc.[ch] for details
of string stack.
and many user complaints why the shell hangs in echo "`"
- eval.c: Fix exitstatus invalid resetting in `if' statements were:
if (exit 3); then
echo foo $?
else
echo bar $?
fi
printed 'bar 0' instead of bar 3
- restore parsing state after parsing old style command substitution.
The ';' in '`echo z;`' broke the following:
for i in 1; do
cat > /dev/tty << __EOF__
`echo z;`
__EOF__
done
cVS: Enter Log. Lines beginning with `CVS: ' are removed automatically