Denys Vlasenko 97edfc42f1 ash: jobs - Do not block when waiting on SIGCHLD
Upstream comment:

    Date: Mon, 7 May 2018 00:40:34 +0800
    jobs - Do not block when waiting on SIGCHLD

    Because of the nature of SIGCHLD, the process may have already been
    waited on and therefore we must be prepared for the case that wait
    may block.  So ensure that it doesn't by using WNOHANG.

    Furthermore, multiple jobs may have exited when gotsigchld is set.
    Therefore we need to wait until there are no zombies left.

    Lastly, waitforjob needs to be called with interrupts off and
    the original patch broke that.

    Fixes: 03876c0743a5 ("eval: Reap zombies after built-in...")
    Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>

While at it, removed INT_ON/OFF in waitforjob() - it must be called
from INT_OFF region anyway.

Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
2020-02-18 15:37:22 +01:00
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http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7


http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap01.html
Shell & Utilities

It says that any of the standard utilities may be implemented
as a regular shell built-in. It gives a list of utilities which
are usually implemented that way (and some of them can only
be implemented as built-ins, like "alias"):

alias
bg
cd
command
false
fc
fg
getopts
jobs
kill
newgrp
pwd
read
true
umask
unalias
wait


http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html
Shell Command Language

It says that shell must implement special built-ins. Special built-ins
differ from regular ones by the fact that variable assignments
done on special builtin are *PRESERVED*. That is,

VAR=VAL special_builtin; echo $VAR

should print VAL.

(Another distinction is that an error in special built-in should
abort the shell, but this is not such a critical difference,
and moreover, at least bash's "set" does not follow this rule,
which is even codified in autoconf configure logic now...)

List of special builtins:

. file
: [argument...]
break [n]
continue [n]
eval [argument...]
exec [command [argument...]]
exit [n]
export name[=word]...
export -p
readonly name[=word]...
readonly -p
return [n]
set [-abCefhmnuvx] [-o option] [argument...]
set [+abCefhmnuvx] [+o option] [argument...]
set -- [argument...]
set -o
set +o
shift [n]
times
trap n [condition...]
trap [action condition...]
unset [-fv] name...

In practice, no one uses this obscure feature - none of these builtins
gives any special reasons to play such dirty tricks.

However. This section also says that *function invocation* should act
similar to special built-in. That is, variable assignments
done on function invocation should be preserved after function invocation.

This is significant: it is not unthinkable to want to run a function
with some variables set to special values. But because of the above,
it does not work: variable will "leak" out of the function.