Ron Yorston be366e5afa ash: support platforms that don't have '%m' printf specifier
The '%m' conversion specifier prints an error message based on the
current value of 'errno'.  It is available in the GNU C library,
Cygwin (since 2012), uClibc and musl.

It is not available in various BSDs, BSD-derived systems (MacOS,
Android) or Microsoft Windows.

Use a symbol defined in platform.h to control how error messages
can be formatted to display the 'errno' message.  On platforms that
support it use '%m'; on other platforms use '%s' and strerror().

On platforms that have '%m' there is essentially no change in the
size of the binary.  Otherwise:

function                                             old     new   delta
redirect                                            1287    1310     +23
xtcsetpgrp                                            27      44     +17
dup2_or_raise                                         34      51     +17
setinputfile                                         267     275      +8
.rodata                                           163379  163371      -8
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(add/remove: 0/0 grow/shrink: 4/1 up/down: 65/-8)              Total: 57 bytes

Signed-off-by: Ron Yorston <rmy@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
2017-07-28 15:39:26 +02:00
..
2017-07-21 09:50:55 +02:00
2017-07-21 09:50:55 +02:00
2017-07-26 00:07:27 +02:00
2014-11-20 01:43:30 +01:00

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.